MONEY
MONEY. IT'S NOT WHAT MOST OF US THINK.
Ask anyone where money comes from and most will say “the Mint” or “the U.S. Treasury” or even more generally, “the government.” But most national governments create only about 3% of all the money in circulation. The other 97% is created by private commercial banks when they make loans.
This is what is known as “fiat money,” recognized by the government as legal tender for payment of taxes. But various forms of “people’s money” have existed for millennia. These complementary currencies have coincided with periods of abundance and wellbeing. Today, complementary currencies are often tied to “buy local” programs. We have developed a system for expanding the power of local currencies to benefit a wider user base.
Money Old and New, Explained

- Part 1 – What is Money?
- Part 2 – Creating Successful Alternatives
The contents of these three sections are also available as a downloadable pdf document, “Money – A Time for Change.”
All of our research efforts over the past decade inevitably brought us back to the issue of how to put more money in the hands of small businesses and communities, including capital and credit markets and the mechanisms to facilitate them.
Ultimately that led to examining money itself and exploring how it is injected into the economy. We came to realize that our previous efforts were defined by the existing money paradigm, and that to truly break free from the constraints of the current monetary system, money must be injected into the economy via an alternate means.
With the right solution, local regions can then in essence achieve economic sovereignty. In doing so, many if not all of the world’s current financial problems could be eliminated.