Monthly Archives: February 2009

With the Singapore Business Group

Last night I was given a great welcome at the meeting of the Singapore Business Group which was hosted by Stephenson Harwood, a law firm that has a number of offices in Asia.

While outlining the problems of the Global Financial Crisis, I presented Bartercard as the ‘private business solution’.

Here are the 13 slides.

One Italian business man who attended has already signed our online petition!

Challenging the Recession

Can we Change the Economy? Yes, we Can!

This is the title of the event that we’re preparing for end of April at the House of Commons.

In preparation, I gave a presentation for the Open Discussion Society at Birkbeck College and will soon talk about the same subject to the Singapore Business Club: Challenging the Recession

Conrad Taylor recorded both audio and video.

Why I Love Bartercard

Let me count the ways:

  1. As an enterprise, Bartercard started in Australia which to my German / Slavic mindset promises to come from a reasonably sound money culture. Having established bank accounts in five different countries in my life, I am aware of significant differences between emotional attitudes towards money.
  2. As a company, Bartercard has been around since 1991 and it has visibly improved substantially, since I last visited their offices some 5-6 years ago.
  3. “Trade pounds” is the right name for the right purpose as the UKĀ  “barter currency”.
  4. Bartercard’s computer system is as comprehensive as possible and has clearly grown ‘from experience’.
  5. Bartercard’s ‘means of payment’ are excellent, too: a credit card, on-line facilities, vouchers and even transfers from mobile phone to mobile phone!
  6. Bartercard means usury-free banking, ethical accounting and has the potential of a social business in the definition of Nobel Peace prize winner Muhammad Yunus: non-loss, non-dividend (the franchise model is apparently under discussion) and for the benefit (rather than the exploitation) of its member clients.
  7. One of the Bartercard directors has had his own experience of being overcharged by Lloyds. So he knows how important it is to create ethical alternatives to what has been described as being ‘criminogenic’: a legal privilege ruled by self-regulation…

From our LETS experience, we could contribute the ‘passbook’ as an additional means of payment: the balance is open for every trader to see, and counter signatures demonstrate the ‘mutual credit’ principle, on which complementary currencies are based.

The passbook comes from the former DDR and is designed for individuals and senior citizens who grew up before Internet times or still like pen and paper!

The Usury-Free Banking Act Law, 1983

This act has been formulated in the Islamic Republic of Iran and can be found here. Some of the titles of the articles and chapters read as follows:

  1. Objectives of the banking system
  2. Functions of the banking system
  3. Mobilization of Monetary Resources
  4. Banking Facilities

What a model!

Welcome to Usury-Free Banking with Stable Currencies!

Welcome to my latest blog that promotes LETS as community building activities, and BarterCard as a social business in the way that Nobel Peace prize winner Muhammad Yunus has defined it: operating without loss, without dividends and for the greater good.

The blog informs about money and currencies as solutions to the banking crisis.

And it promotes:

  • banking that is usury-free rather than thrives on legitimising usury
  • accounting that is ethical and in the public interest or at least in the interest of the members of an organisation and clients of a business
  • enterprises that are social, i.e. good for society and our environment.

In the Spirit of the Forum for Stable Currencies, your most passionate blogger, promoter and mathematician Sabine K McNeill.