Yehoodi.com

    Yehoodi Radio - Listen 24 hours a day! Listen 24 hours a day! Weekly updated shows     Frim Fram Jam - NYC's Lindy Hop Thursdays!

Time to make Yehoodi Dollars a reality!

  • Joined 8/28/00
  • 10519

http://www.newsweek.com/id/170372

Quote
A Plan For Hard Times: Print Cash By Tony Dokoupil | NEWSWEEK Published Nov 22, 2008 From the magazine issue dated Dec 1, 2008 People nationwide may start hoarding their cash as recession fears grow. But in Riverwest—a progressive enclave of Milwaukee—residents have another answer to their money trouble: they'll print their own. The proposed River Currency would be used like cash at local businesses, keeping the area economy humming whatever the health of the country at large. "We can create our own value," explains Sura Faraj, 48, one of the plan's organizers. It's an attractive idea when times are tight. Communities print what look like ordinary bills with serial numbers, anti-counterfeiting details and images of local landmarks (the Milwaukee River, for instance) instead of presidential portraits. Residents benefit through an exchange system: 10 traditional dollars, for instance, nets them $20 worth of local currency. And when businesses agree to value the funny money like real greenbacks, they also get a free stack to kick-start spending. It's all perfectly legal (except for coins) as long as it's not for profit and the bizarro dinero doesn't resemble the real thing. Dozens of such systems flourished during the Great Depression. In the 1990s, they re-emerged as a way to fight globalization by keeping wealth in local hands. Now the dream of homespun cash is back because it keeps people liquid even if they're unemployed or short on traditional dollars. (The U.S. Treasury declined to comment on the burgeoning interest in local currency systems.) In the past month, Steve Burke, who runs Ithaca Hours, a currency system in upstate New York founded in 1991, has fielded calls from a half-dozen organizers hoping to mint their own money in Vermont, Hawaii and Michigan, among other places. Meanwhile, Susan Witt, who directs the nonprofit behind the BerkShares currency in Berkshire County, Mass., has heard from groups in New York, California and New Jersey, where last year Newark's city hall asked for advice on potential Newark Bucks. Since BerkShares launched in 2006, almost $2 million has been exchanged for cash, and the equivalent of $180,000 is in circulation. "You can get a divorce, plan a funeral and go to just about any restaurant in town," Witt says. The biggest downside? Taxes. Even in the parallel world of earning and spending alternative currencies, Uncle Sam gets his cut.

Martinis do not contain vodka. —Rachel Maddow

Yehoodi Featured Topics

 

(4 items total, 30 per page)

 
  • Joined 2/5/01
  • 1485
  • Post #1
  • Originally posted Monday, November 24, 2008 (3 years ago)

umm, so how do the businesses accepting this "cash" pay for what they need to bring in from the outside to run their business? Seriously, the Gov. can tax fake money?

I may not live there anymore, but my dancing feet will always be from L.A.

  • Joined 7/20/99
  • 6220
  • Post #2
  • Originally posted Monday, November 24, 2008 (3 years ago)

What I know about Ithaca Hours goes like this - you work to earn them. So the work you do for, say, a grocery store means they don't have to pay someone. So they save money from not having to hire extra employees and that savings is passed on in the way of free food (or food in exchange for Ithaca Hours). Ideally, it evens out. Not sure if this is how it works in other places but this basic premise seems sound to me. A business couldn't run on the fake money alone, but it's great for the underemployed or businesses who can spare goods in exchange for services.

  • Joined 9/5/01
  • 1321
  • Post #3
  • Originally posted Monday, November 24, 2008 (3 years ago)

Sounds like Canadian Tire Money.

I'm also curious about the tax implications. I would assume that it would be the same as trading goods (ie Alice trades Bob several bushels of corn, for fertilizer, then Alice trades the fertilizer with Cindy for lumber). Then the question of value comes in, is the value of the note pegged to the U.S. dollar or does it float?

Here's a great history of U.S. notes and currency for wannabe notaphilists.

  • Joined 9/14/01
  • 3275
  • Post #4
  • Originally posted Tuesday, November 25, 2008 (3 years ago)

Hmmm ... I think I should visit Milwaukee a lot more often!

"A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having" - V

(4 items total, 30 per page)