(2) Berkshare is the largest local currency in US. And its website has an archive for news reports about it.
http://www.berkshares.org/press/2009.htm
Reports of local currencies peaked in 2009, a year into the Great Recession.
(a) Marisol Bello, Communities print their own currency to keep cash flowing. USA Today, April 5, 2009/
http://www.berkshares.org/press/09apr05.htm
(b) Jennifer Haley, Some Communities Are Printing Their Own Currency. CNN, Apr 22, 2009.
http://www.berkshares.org/press/09apr22.htm
Quote:
"Printing and distributing local currency isn't illegal. But there are rules, says Lewis Solomon, a law professor at George Washington University. First, the currency can only be paper; no coins are allowed.
"Just printing the right amount of local currency is difficult. If you print too much currency, there's the possibility of inflation. If you print too little, there are no economic advantages.
"Some economists are skeptical that complementary currencies will ever have much impact. 'They usually don't hold up too well, or too long,' says Bert Ely, a banking analyst. * * * And since the early 1990s, there have been about a dozen local currencies that have failed in the United States.
My comment:
(a) There is no need to read the rest of the CNN report.
(b) What are BerkShares? Berkshares, Inc, undated.
http://berkshares.org/whatareberkshares.htm
("BerkShares are a local currency for the Berkshire region [or county] of Massachusetts. * * * Launched in the fall of 2006, BerkShares had a robust initiation, with over one million BerkShares circulated in the first nine months and over 2.7 million to date. Currently, more than four hundred businesses have signed up to accept the currency. Five different banks have partnered with BerkShares, with a total of thirteen branch offices now serving as exchange stations. For BerkShares, this is only the beginning. Future plans could involve BerkShares checking accounts, electronic transfer of funds, ATM machines, and even a loan program")
(c) Dan Barry, Would You Like That in Tens, Twenties or Normans? New York Times, Feb 26, 2007
(photo captions: "Currency specific to Berkshire County, Mass. features images of local heroes including Norman Rockwell [a painter] and Herman Melville [who wrote Moby-Dick]")
was about Berkshares.
(d) WSJ more than 15 years ago had report about local currencies, focusing on Hours of Ithaca, New York.
(i) Ellen Graham, Community groups print Local (and Legal) Currencies. Wall Street Journal, June 27, 1996, p B1
, which can be found in the Web.
(ii) Ithaca Hours. undated.
http://ithacahours.org
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