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Posts Tagged ‘barter’

The barter economy flourishes in the face of chaos

Tuesday, 10 March 2009 17:13 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

There are a whole lot of talented people in the United States and elsewhere. Perhaps one of the most frustrating things about this current crisis is that most people were getting up every day, designing bridges, learning cardiology, teaching kids, and generally being productive. All of the sudden, we get an email from the banks that everything is completely ruined and there will be no more civilization. It’s time to head back to the hunter-gatherer days. The average lifespan will turn to age 36, most people will die from mammoth stampedes, etc.

In reality, people are pretty resourceful. Just because global finance capitalism is caught in a seizure, doesn’t mean people will stop being resourceful. This is why we’re interested in the establishment of community-based barter networks. That energy and talent has to go somewhere.

Farnoosh Torabi is finding all kinds of examples of barter online, from orthodontists trading braces for server maintenance to laser treatment specialists looking for dog grooming.

If our centralized financial system screws up the concept of money, people will go without it. There will likely be all sorts of grey-market activity as a result.

The rise of the barter economy

Monday, 12 January 2009 19:51 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

A few weeks ago we speculated that local barter economies might pop up in response to the implosion of super-fancy global capital markets.

According to a very cool article in the London Times, barter is making a comeback.

In the UK, a village pub, the Pigs, at Edgefield, in Norfolk, offered pints in exchange for locally sourced food to be cooked in its kitchens. Thousands of others trade more formally through exchanges such as Bartercard: last year the Fashion TV network used Bartercard to save £110,000 in cash on alcohol and other goods for its launch party – which FTV is repaying by providing advertising.

Incidentally, here’s that video of our thoughts of barter.

Iceland shows the hard reality of today’s economics

Wednesday, 29 October 2008 16:48 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

Clearly, the last few weeks have been complete turmoil for the world economic system. Practically everyone is revisiting their assumptions about economies, markets, even their own family’s budget. Still, in talking with executives, business owners, young people, and others, I get the sense that Americans haven’t quite yet comprehended the potential impact of these economic shocks.

Iceland, no longer has that luxury.

Today, the interest rate has been raised to 18% as a condition of an IMF cash infusion.

Polish guest workers, who for years have emigrated to Iceland for economic opportunities, are cashing out their remaining krona and heading home. I have heard that they fear the krona’s worthlessness to the point that many are running on the banks, taking cash, and attempting to buy automobiles that will at least hold their worth. (still looking for the link) To me, that’s a real wake up call, when your medium exchange is no longer trusted and people return to basic barter economies.

The economy, for many people, is this abstract interaction, a whirling dervish of numbers than only the  mathematically-inclined financiers of London, Hong Kong, and New York can truly fathom.

Economics is actually a social contract between workers, companies, governments, and consumers. In the end, everything is a barter. I’ll work for twenty years, if you let me live in that house. I’ll work for two hours, if you let me buy that DVD. As a farmer, I’ll grow lots of corn, if you’ll give me bread, cars, housing, and education for my kids in return.

That’s the real system. And when you despoil it, you end up with 18% interest, 20% unemployment, etc.

I may be a futurist, but I was a Vermonter first. And there, the world starts with corn, cows, maple syrup and wood. Everything else is an abstraction that fits on top of that Bronze-Age infrastructure. When we forget that, we get real disruption in return.

It doesn’t have to be gloom and doom. But it doesn’t have to turn out OK, with our 401(k)s returning to “normal,” and our economies chugging along as we’ve become accustomed.

Just ask Iceland.

About the blog

This is the official trend blog of Competitive Futures, a management consultancy that provides trend research and analysis for business and government around the world. Here, we update you on interesting trends we see as part of our work for our clients.


For managing partner Eric Garland's new author and speaker blog, please consult and bookmark http://www.ericgarland.co

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