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Lewes, the proud town that is printing its own money

 
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acrobat74
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PostPosted: Sun Aug 17, 2008 10:39 am    Post subject: Lewes, the proud town that is printing its own money Reply with quote

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/aug/17/currencies.britishident ity

The Observer wrote:

Town that gave itself a licence to print money

Lewes in East Sussex hopes to safeguard its traditions by issuing a local currency

* Jamie Doward and Naomi Loomes
* The Observer,
* Sunday August 17 2008

The value of sterling may be plummeting as fears grow over the depth of a possible recession. But in the scenic East Sussex town of Lewes - famous for its bonfire night parties and bewildering number of pubs - a handy alternative is about to become available.

Next month, in the latest sign that localism is a coming force in British everyday life, Lewes will launch its own currency. In doing so, it joins a growing list of communities around the world attempting to protect regional economies and preserve the distinctive 'feel' of towns and villages.

The Lewes pound will initially be accepted in around 30 locally owned shops and a first run of 10,000-plus notes is expected. It is the largest-scale launch of a local currency in the UK since Lewes had its own pound in the 19th century and, in a coup for the organisers, the town's branch of Barclays bank has agreed to accept it.

Those pushing the Lewes pound, which by law cannot display the Queen's head but is legal tender, stress their humble ambitions for the new currency. 'There will always be a need for a national currency, but it's a question of trying to go back to what can be done locally,' said Oliver Dudok van Heel, one of the scheme's architects. 'This is not us versus the rest of the world,' added Beth Ambrose, a sustainability expert, who denied that the Lewes pound was a declaration of independence. 'All we want to do is strengthen what's good in our community.'

According to one analysis, 80 per cent of the money that goes into a supermarket till leaves the local economy immediately. By backing local stores such trends can be reversed, say the scheme's supporters. 'We had a beautiful, independent toy shop here once,' van Heel said. 'It's now an estate agent.'

Lewes is not alone in its aspirations. In Totnes, Devon, a complementary currency has been running for more than a year. Similar schemes have been launched abroad and it is estimated there are about 9,000 around the world. Across the Atlantic in Berkshire, Massachusetts, some $800,000 worth of local 'Berkshares' are boosting a thriving alternative economy. Switzerland has introduced a localised credit card scheme, while Holland and Germany have had a surge of interest in complementary currencies.

Those backing the new schemes say they are 'big tent' projects which try to involve the whole community. Experts agree that they thrive in places where people have become disillusioned with central government, suggesting they reflect more than merely economic concerns.

'This is political, but with a small p,' said Patrick Cockburn, a Lewes resident who is backing the new currency. 'It seems a Tory sort of idea - empowering individualism - but it's really about boosting the local community.'

In Argentina, demand for local currencies took off after the economy collapsed in the late Nineties. 'These types of currency go right back,' said David Boyle, a fellow at the New Economics Foundation in London. 'There was a flurry of complementary currencies in the Great Depression. But President Roosevelt outlawed them because he was afraid they might undermine the banks.'

For this reason, proponents of the Lewes pound believe now is the right time for its launch. 'With the current credit crunch, there is some disquiet about the global economic system,' van Heel acknowledged. 'Who knows how important this could be? Studies show if there is more than 12 per cent unemployment in a community these systems become very popular.'

If anywhere can make a new currency work, the locals of Lewes claim it is their town, which prides itself on its independent spirit and the absence of the likes of Starbucks. It already has form when it comes to minor uprisings. After Greene King, the brewing and pub chain, stopped selling the locally brewed Harveys beer and ale at the Lewes Arms there was a mass boycott and the drinks were back within months.

Perhaps, then, it is no coincidence that the town's most famous resident is the radical political pamphleteer Thomas Paine, credited with sowing the intellectual seeds of American independence. Etched under a painting of Paine on a wall of one of Lewes's churches is one of his most famous aphorisms: 'We have the power to build the world anew.'

Two centuries on, the inhabitants of Lewes have the chance to show in their own small way that they still agree.

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2008 7:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

And not once does this article reference "Transition towns": the common link between Lewis and Totnes of course
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2008 9:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

How the Totnes Pound works
http://totnes.transitionnetwork.org/totnespound/home/howitworks


No mention of interest (usury) free lending and borrowing that I can find at the moment on these UK local currencies. Not forgetting the points raised by Simon, Ian and others.
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The fact that these pounds only come into creation in exchange for pounds stirling surely means that if every town in England had such a system it would make no difference to the overall money paradigm.

We need a money that is created in opposition to stirling....but that will never happen on a large scale for all sorts of reasons.

No. It will take something really big before elected government itself does away with the scam that is fractional reserve banking.
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Andrew.
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

kbo234 wrote:
The fact that these pounds only come into creation in exchange for pounds stirling surely means that if every town in England had such a system it would make no difference to the overall money paradigm.

We need a money that is created in opposition to stirling....but that will never happen on a large scale for all sorts of reasons.

No. It will take something really big before elected government itself does away with the scam that is fractional reserve banking.




Good point kbo234: I wonder how far people think the PTB will go to protect this scam.
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acrobat74
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PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 11:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2008/nov/01/consumeraffairs-communitie s

Lewes Pound - sparkler or damp squib?

The town best-known for its over-the-top bonfire night celebrations made another bang when it launched its own currency, as Joanna Simmons reports

* Joanna Simmons
* The Guardian,
* Saturday November 1 2008

The picture-postcard town of Lewes in East Sussex is best-known for its annual bonfire celebrations. But in early September it shot to national attention for another reason - launching its own currency in the hope of boosting local businesses and beating the credit crunch.

As the town prepares for its feisty November 5 commemoration of the Guy Fawkes gunpowder plot and of 17 Protestant martyrs burned there by Mary Tudor in the 16th century, this year sparks have also been flying ... about the Lewes Pounds.

Eager children were buying their post-school snacks with the smart green note, decorated with 18th-century radical thinker and resident Thomas Paine on one side and Lewes castle on the other; townsfolk were walking to the shops to buy with it and the community in general enjoyed a powerful boost to its civic pride.

Then they ran out. Just three days in, the initial 10,000 pounds had been bought with only a portion making their way into the economy. Many residents bought them as souvenirs, while some fell into the hands of collectors or were sold on eBay for £35 a piece.

Undaunted, the Lewes Pound Group issued further currency on October 4. Group member Oliver Dudock van Heel, is coy about how much. "If you put a figure on it, people assume scarcity," he says. "There are now 25,000 in circulation and more in stock."

Although cutting CO2 emissions and depriving the chain stores of some of the town's cash are all on the pound's manifesto, Van Heel stresses that its initial aim was simply to encourage people to spend locally and to increase a sense of pride in the community. "All we wanted in the first year was to raise awareness of local shopping and we have already done that in the first two months. People really get the idea."

But is it only Lewes's middle-class, left-leaning, eco-aware residents who have embraced the concept? "No," he says. "There has been a lot of interest across the town, a complete spectrum of individuals."

Seventy traders were signed up to the scheme at launch, but this has mushroomed to 125. Amongst them are Lewes big guns, Bill's Produce Store (recently bought out by Richard Caring, owner of London's celebrity haunts The Ivy and Le Caprice) and the Harveys brewery, which now also gives 10% of all its charitable donations in the pound, and has launched a beer, the Quidsin, in honour of the scheme.

The pound is scheduled to circulate until August 30, 2009, but the Lewes Pound Group - working with the New Economics Foundation - is already considering how to take it forward beyond that date. "All we need is enthusiasm from traders and the people of the town," says van Heel. "If, in six months, it is being traded and people want to keep it, then it will continue."

Introducing higher denominations is a priority for a second phase, as many of the more exclusive shops and boutiques at the top of the High Street report scant, or no, sales in Lewes Pounds. "I am absolutely in favour of it, but I have never been offered it," says Daphne Culligan, of boutique Renwick Clarke. "Apart from £10 T-shirts, the clothes here are too expensive to pay for in single pounds."

Higher denominations demand a substantial increase in security, and consequently cost more to produce, while the modest £1 note has proved super secure. A cheaper option is a card-based system, like the WIR used by 16% of Swiss businesses.

While higher-end shops may have to wait until phase two, traders like Sue May, of May's General Store, are already feeling the benefit. "People use it without commenting - it's become normal," she says. Between 15% and 30% of her sales are in the Lewes Pound and her shop is busier than ever. "There's real interest and also a loyalty factor - people try to shop locally."

Sue is also one of three issuing points for the currency and finds people typically exchange £40 or £50 at a time. Last week she issued around 900, "and to a real mix of people". Andi Mindel is one. A single mother, who volunteers at Friends of the Earth in London, she changes around £120 into Lewes Pounds each fortnight.

"It makes me feel deeply rooted here," she says. It has largely replaced sterling for her and her eight-year-old son, Daniel, who gets five as pocket money every fortnight. "I go to Waitrose for the things I can't buy locally, otherwise I buy everything with it. It can be a bit more expensive, but it evens out through the acts of kindness the shop owners have shown me.

"I now have a relationship with people that wasn't there before. It's brought the community together and provoked discussion. Plus, there's a certain pleasure in counting out 20 one pound notes to buy your food."

Trading on the novelty value
Stephen Catlin with Lewes pounds Photograph: Frank Baron

Stephen Catlin has lived in Lewes for 10 years, "but known it for 40" and runs a tobacconist and confectionary shop on the high street. He was one of the original 70 traders to sign up to the scheme, but is now sceptical.

"It gave a buzz, it was something new, but since the Pounds ran out and were reissued there's been scant interest," he says. "I occasionally get offered them. I had 15 amassed in the till, but no one wants them in change, so I will have to take them back to the Town Hall and change them."

He feels the USP of the Pound - its ability to keep local money within the local economy - is a nonsense: "£9.75 of every £10 I make goes out of Lewes because I can't get what I need to sell locally. There isn't a Lindt chocolate maker in the town, or a cigar manufacturer. I suppose the 4p I make on a packet of cigs stays in Lewes," he shrugs, "but I don't believe that will make much difference." Catlin remembers when the town was sustained by two breweries, a foundry, a quarry and a printworks and the high street was busy with shoppers at lunch time.

"Now, just look at it," he says. "People don't go out each day to shop. What this town needs is work. The Lewes Pound, while it provided real local interest, is not the long-term answer. It's simply a novelty."

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Summary of 9/11 scepticism: http://tinyurl.com/27ngaw6 and www.911summary.com
Off the TV: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4szU19bQVE
Those who do not think that employment is systemic slavery are either blind or employed. (Nassim Taleb)
www.moneyasdebt.net
http://www.positivemoney.org.uk/
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