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Interest and Inflation Free Money: Creating an Exchange ... (ISBN 0865713197)

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Step By Step Guidebook For Monetary Change:
No need to reinvent the wheel. This book explains how money works for those who already have too much and against those who are really creating the wealth. Then it shows examples of systems tried and shown to be effective in keeping the productivity in the hands of the creators and at the same time allowing the already-rich to keep their security. No guesswork necesary. A complete guide to making changes that are long overdue in this nation and hopefully on this planet. Imagine working your fair share of time and prospering while the earth has a chance to recover from merciless plunder. Don't dream it: BE it!


Important Book:
Someday humanity will look back on this book and wonder why its methods were not put into practice generations sooner. Better late than never. Free yourself. Become part of the solution.


Boston Tea Party for Wage Slaves:
If people only understood the concepts in this easy to read book, freedom would return to this land. People would be able to keep the profits from their labor. Americans who have been taught to endure hardship simply to earn a living would find that their life-energy has been stolen and would be empowered to take it back. Land would be redistributed and it would be profitable to live lightly on the earth once again. The system described in this book is tried and proven. Many communities are using its example to restore prosperity to their citizens. Small but powerful book. Should be required reading for all high-school students. At least the next generation would taste freedom and prosperity.


An excellent description of how money works:
This book is a very precise and neutral description of the economic good called "money", and how it works and has worked throughout history. It is not about creating dreamworld that makes all economic problems disappear magically. It has also nothing to do whatsoever with taking away money from those who supposedly have "too much" and giving it to those who have "too little". This book has to be read with a very open mind, since from the viewpoint of our economy it is sometimes hard to imagine what money would be like without interest or inflation. Margrit Kennedy does an excellent job in describing what has happened repeatedly throughout history when, fortuitiously or upon insight and knowledge, money was used differently than today. One main message of this book is that money has to circulate in order to be useful, the faster the better. I don't think that there are many economically educated people who would disagree with that, even in our present economy. One of Kennedy's arguments is that interests act as an incentive to save money, thus slowing circulation down immensely. Without interests, even a very small depreciation of money over time (that could be misinterpreted as "government-induced inflation") acts as a strong incentive to keep money in flow. Margrit Kennedy thoroughly describes how in the "Experiment of Worgl", the mayor of a small Austrian town in 1932/33 was able to lead the economy of his town from post-war bankruptcy to health and wealth within one year with such an emergency currency. The theory behind his experiment the mayor had read in Silvio Gesell's "The Natural Economic Order". The knowledge about money presented in this book is not new. In many very old cultures it is simply forbidden to take interests. Margrit Kennedy describes how that is by no means an ethical issue but has very concrete economic foundations. Interests can, and do, ruin a flourishing economy in a very short time span. Inflation can only delay the inevitable economic crisis that must follow as soon as the value of money is allowed to increase exponentially, unlinking its value from the goods that it used to represent. It may be to Kennedy's disadvantage that the her primary degree is in architecture and not economics. But even as a certified economist, she would not be able to predict exactly what would happen if the economic system were changed now. It is therefore only honest to present the future as a theory and speculation, and only history as fact. An interesting aspect of introducing interest-free money (very punny) is that nothing needs to be taken away from anyone supposedly rich. The alternative system allows for social differences. It only takes away the repeated escalation and economic crash. Margrit Kennedy gives ample references to "real" economists, and the principle is easy enough to be understood by everyone. It is very enjoyable to understand money in a new way. great book.


10 pages data, rest is opinion:
Starting chapter 3 "up to this point of the analysis we have dealt with facts and figures which anyone can verify. From now on we are dealing with "educated guesses," " This book could be titled "Lets do it my way, which is the same way, with different names". Basically wants to substitute a market dictated inflation by a government dictated inflation. Or for example chapter 2 "a community would buy up all its land and lease it out to its inhabitants." That is exactly what happens everywhere, just change community for country and lease for taxes, and there you are. And is the same for the rest. Wow, an economic war: "We are living in world war III already" It has a section titled "THE CHURCHES AND SPIRITUAL GROUPS" In chapter 4 she states that people didn't like the idea she is proposing "people obviously disliked the money which lost so much at regular intervals" Finally, M Kennedy is "architect, ecologist and writer" not economist.


Author:Margrit Kennedy
Author:Declan Kennedy
Binding:Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number:332.4
EAN:9780865713192
Edition:Revised
ISBN:0865713197
Number Of Pages:144
Publication Date:1995-03



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