Covid-19 will be mobilised by the financial industry to push their War on Cash even further, leaving us ever more ensnared within their private digital money empire

 

This article was published on the 3rd of June on the author’s website https://alteredstatesof.money

 

For a number of years I have investigated– and warned about – the War on Cash. This is the slow process by which the banking sector, payments industry, financial technology companies and governments have – in subtle and not-so-subtle ways – tried to wean people off the physical cash system, and to onboard them into the bank-run digital payments system.

Calling it a ‘war’ is controversial, because in the mainstream this process is often described as a peaceful and organic bottom-up move towards a ‘cashless society’ driven by ordinary people. I, on the other hand, characterise it as an aggressive and artificial top-down move towards a ‘bankful society’, driven by the financial industry and many governments. The bankful society is one in which the banks (or platforms built on top of them, such as Paypal) intermediate between even the smallest of payments, seeping between buyers and sellers like a payments chaperone. This consolidates and expands the power of the banking system, gives them enormous amounts of data, and enables them to enter into mega-deals with mega-tech platforms, who also rely on a turn away from cash to facilitate the mega-automation they seek.

The War on Cash prior to Covid-19

The War on Cash has sometimes taken the form of outright attacks (such as when the Indian government aggressively degraded the Indian cash system during their so-called ‘demonetisation’). More often, however, it has taken the form of consistent propaganda (Visa openly talks about their campaign to make cash seem ‘peculiar’ to people), amidst a subtle drive to engineer the market environment in such as way as to make cash increasingly inconvenient to use (such as shutting down ATMs). As these processes unfold, they catalyse network effects in which we find ourselves ‘spontaneously’ beginning to ‘choose’ digital payment (in much the same way that supermarkets inspire kids to ‘choose’ chocolates by placing them at eye level by the checkout counters). Once this catalysing happens, those who wish to resist this turn to the bank system find themselves increasingly forced into compliance by others who have succumbed to it.

But many people still refuse to toe the official banking-meets-tech line, and wish to keep using cash, despite the fact that the economic system around them is increasingly being loaded against this choice. I and others such as Which?, Ralph Nader, Positive Money, and The RSA have come out in praise of cash. We see it as an inclusive, privacy-preserving, public means of payment. I see the aggressive spread of digital payments not only as an attempt to fully privatise the payments system, but also as an attempt to ‘gentrify payments’ – to tell people that they are criminal or dodgy if they do not wish to be absorbed into the giant generic chain institutions of global finance. The payments industry – underpinned by the global banking sector – has managed to convince states that it is noble, or even humanitarian, to make ever-greater numbers of people dependent on the banking system (a system that by no means has their interests at heart), under the cry of ‘financial inclusion’.

Cash is in fact the only form of state money we can hold. In much the same way that casino chips are privately-issued promises (issued by a casino) for cash we might hand in to them as we enter a casino, the ‚money‘ we see in our bank accounts is actually ‘digital chips’ issued to us by those commercial banks. These chips are promises – or IOUs – promising us access to state money. We can pass these digital chips around within the private ecosystems controlled by the banking sector, but every time we go to the ATM we are redeeming those chips to exit the banking system (like walking out of the casino). It follows then, that as ATMs get shut down, our ability to exit the banking system goes down too. We are getting trapped inside their private ecosystems. This is in their commercial interests, which is why for many years the private payments industry has used whatever they can to demonise the public cash system, which competes with them. Rather than being showcased as an inclusive form of public payment, cash is continuously accused of facilitating crime and tax evasion, and has long been cast as unhygienic and ‘dirty’.

The War on Cash After Covid-19

Now, with the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, this latter argument suddenly seems a lot more visceral to many people. Supermarkets, painfully aware of a duty to prevent the spread of the virus, openly order people to turn away from the public cash system and to use the private banking system for payments (‘please use contactless payment’). It is vital that we always criticise and remain vigilant against the growing corporate domination that surrounds us, but this critique has suddenly taken a back seat to the immediate task of slowing the disease spread.

For big corporates, therefore, this has been a perfect opportunity to consolidate and extend their power. Many of them are already too-big-to-fail and governments always rush to protect and promote them first in the midst of a crisis. We have already seen players like Amazon massively expand their power during Covid (as people stuck at home under lock-down turn even more to the digital giants who already dominate the cyberspace realm), but in the financial sector this same enforced ‘turn to the digital’ is a huge commercial win for the private payments industry (aka. banking industry). They will use Covid forcefully to suppress and undermine cash even more than they already have.

The rise of Amazon and the rise of the digital payments industry is no co-incidence. These players have natural synergies as they all seek to create vast systems of interlocking automation. They wish for, and benefit from, a world in which economies are remotely coordinated via their huge datacentre systems, rather than being negotiated through face-to-face interaction between people on the street. And, while Covid might have forced various forms of positive economic soul-searching amongst people, it has simultaneously played directly into the hands of any player that seeks automation-at-a-distance, which includes both Big Tech and Big Finance.

Indeed, Covid is far more than a blow to the cash system. It is a blow to the face-to-face physical world, which includes cash, but also hugs, doorknobs, shared microphones at karaoke evenings, drunken pub conversations, kissing Tinder dates, dancing at weddings, dancing at beach parties, dancing at church, bench-pressing in the gym, and sharing a cigarette with a friendly stranger you meet outside a nightclub. Yes, cash is another thing in the physical world, and yes, as a physical object it does have the ability to carry viruses. But again, so does every supermarket item, public transport system, Uber car, and – for that matter – digital payments PIN pad.

As an aside, it is in fact not apparent that cash is actually a particular risk compared to other objects in the world. As the Covid pandemic took off, the German Bundesbank (the country’s central bank) issued a press release stating that ‘Cash poses no particular risk of infection for public’, noting that “the probability of becoming ill from handling cash is smaller than from many other objects used in everyday life”. They cited infectiologist (and head of the Frankfurt am Main Health Office) René Gottschalk, who argued that banknotes do not lend themselves to being an infection channel for coronavirus.

Nevertheless, a sloppy journalist at the British newspaper The Telegraph misrepresented the World Health Organisation by writing an opportunistic story claiming that „Dirty banknotes may be spreading the coronavirus, WHO suggests“. This sent the world’s media on an anti-cash bonanza, as they parroted the Telegraph story. This, in turn, prompted the WHO spokesperson to issue a statement saying ‘We did NOT say that cash was transmitting coronavirus’. The damage, however, was already done – it was now official fake news spreading through Daily Mail articles shared on social media and Whatsapp groups.

In the UK, the banking industry took advantage of this, quickly arranging for a rise in the contactless payments limit via the banking lobby group UK Finance. Customers spooked by the dubious anti-cash news articles suddenly found solace in the arms of the banking sector.

The Hidden Side of the Coin

Despite this, statistics show that there was a strong spike in cash withdrawals at the announcement of lock-down. This tells us something very interesting: in the midst of a crisis people value the fact that ‘cash does not crash’. You use cash to exit the unstable and failure-prone banking system, which is why people rush to hoard cash at news of an impending hurricane or war. Central banks refer to this as ‘precautionary demand for cash’.

This alerts us to a broader point, which is that the risks around Covid extend far beyond the actual virus. It has set in motion a major economic downturn, and not only are banks increasingly unstable in the midst of an economic downturn, but they themselves seek to pull back from giving service to those they deem risky. This means they retract lending from small businesses and ignore poorer people who are not as profitable to them as richer people. These people include those who are disparagingly referred to as ‘the unbanked’ or ‚the underbanked‘, whose numbers increase during a crisis. This is to say that anti-cash rhetoric from media, supermarkets and governments has increased at the very same moment that the prime providers of digital payments – the banks – turn away from those who most rely upon cash. Make no mistake: the War on Cash is laden with class dynamics, and is often unthinkingly perpetuated by yuppies who have a natural trust for large institutions (which tend to be set up in their interests).

Perhaps you are one of the people that the banking sector likes to offer products to. Perhaps right now you do feel the pull of the digital, and are choosing to become dependent upon distant corporate datacentres to intermediate your interactions with everyone else. Perhaps in the short term that feels less scary to you than entering a shop with breathing human beings. But, in the longer term, a world in which we isolate ourselves whilst relying upon mega-corporates to stand between us is far more scary. The fact that Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos earns $215 million per day (regardless of whether he turns up to work) is testament to the fact that every time you tell his automated system to send goods to you, you are playing directly into an alliance his company has forged with the banking sector. You use the digital payments system to pay him, and – simultaneously – to pay all the banking execs, while the actual Amazon workers (who face all the frontline risk) make 80 dollars a day.

For centuries the banking sector has rushed head-over-heels to give priority service to people like Bezos while excluding and often exploiting those on the peripheries (misselling products, giving predatory loans, gouging fees and so on). This is why precarious workers have for centuries relied on the cash system, which is public in nature and offers them a way to transact without having to enter a system mostly run on behalf of the Bezos’ of the world.

Amazon, in fact, lobbied against pro-cash legislation in places like Philadelphia because both Big Tech and Big Finance are aligned in their desire to hoover up more people into their ecosystems, and stitch up the economy in a Matrix-like mesh of digital coordination.

Neverthless, while Covid appears to play into this, it is also provoking other reactions in us. After months of being locked down and entering this digital Matrix to interact with the outside world, many people are being forced to grapple with what they really feel about the digital world. Do you really want to live there for the rest of time? A fearful retreat into the digital is a short-term solution, but not a long-term one. In the long-term it could have severely negative consequences.

The fact that people rush out into the parks at the first available opportunity is testament to the fact that we are biological, social creatures. The longer we stay indoors, the greater the latent desire builds up for contact with the physical, for dancing in sweaty nightclubs, for raucous embraces at football matches, and for pub quiz nights where everyone stuffs a £10 note as an entry fee into a beer glass.

So let’s hold our nerve. We will have to learn to touch doorknobs again at some point. We will be more mindful of hygiene, but a sci-fi world of automated doors and remotely initiated digital interactions will never feed the human spirit in the way that a dive bar with swing dancing will. I understand that circumstances force us to experiment with the realm of the digital – and this can be positive, especially when it can be used to cut down unecessary flying (an action which will be needed for the major climate crisis which still awaits ahead of us), but let’s use this time to explore positive alternatives to Big Tech, rather than running into their paternalistic arms.

And, please don’t succumb to the opportunistic push of the payments industry, as they use this situation to push even more in the War on Cash. Yes, cash is physical, and more present to our bodies than the cold crackle of cyberspace. But we too are physical, and a lot more organic than the digital world and the corporations that preside over it. Cash is not our enemy, and those corporates are not our friends.

This article was published on the 3rd of June on the author’s website https://alteredstatesof.money

Die Monetative e.V. veranstaltet in Zeiten der Corona-Krise nun im wöchentlichen Rhythmus Web-Gespräche zu jeweils einem Aspekt des umfangreichen Themas „Monetäre und wirtschaftliche Aspekte der Corona-Krise“. Nach einer kurzen fachlichen Einführung zu Beginn, wird es den Teilnehmern ermöglicht sich in die Diskussion mit einzubringen.

Weitergeführt wird die Reihe am 25.06.2020 um 19 Uhr, das Gespräch wird wieder eine Stunde dauern. Melden Sie sich hier für die Teilnahme am Gespräch an. Experte an diesem Tag wird Dr. Dirk Ehnts sein, welcher über die Thematik „Was schlägt die ‚Modern-money-Theory‘ (MMT) zur Bewältigung der Corona-Schuldenkrise vor“ sprechen wird.

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Am 07. Februar 2020 veranstaltete das Netzwerk Plurale Ökonomik die Tagung „Der nächste Crash als Chance“ in Berlin. Einige der spannenden Vorträge und Podiumsdiskussionen hat monneta an diesem Tag mit der Kamera begleitet.

Prof. Dr. Dr. Helge Peukert referierte zu Beginn der Tagung unter der Überschrift „Rückblick, Status Quo und Ursachen für den nächsten Crash“ und übernahm damit die thematische Einführung an diesem Tag. In seinem knapp 25-Minütigen Vortrag spricht er unter anderem über die Lehren aus dem Crash 2007, Schattenbanken, Blasen und Wachstumszwänge.

 

 

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Am 07. Februar 2020 veranstaltete das Netzwerk Plurale Ökonomik die Tagung „Der nächste Crash als Chance“ in Berlin. Einige der spannenden Vorträge und Podiumsdiskussionen hat monneta an diesem Tag mit der Kamera begleitet.

Marc Friedrich (Friedrich & Weik) war der zweite Keynote-Speaker an diesem Tag. In seinem circa 15-Minütigen Vortrag spricht er über ein mögliches Negativszenario des nächsten Crashs.

 

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Am 07. Februar 2020 veranstaltete das Netzwerk Plurale Ökonomik die Tagung „Der nächste Crash als Chance“ in Berlin. Einige der spannenden Vorträge und Podiumsdiskussionen hat monneta an diesem Tag mit der Kamera begleitet.

Anna Reisch und Lino Zeddies, beides Mitglieder des Netzwerks Plurale Ökonomik, skizzierten im dritten Vortrag des Tages ein mögliches Positiv-Szenario. Anna Reisch verkörperte eine junge Dame aus der Zukunft, welche von den positiven Entwicklungen und dem Finanzsystem ihrer Zeit berichtet und das Publikum dazu auffordert, schon jetzt die Weichen für diese „schöne“ Zukunft zu stellen.

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Am 07. Februar 2020 veranstaltete das Netzwerk Plurale Ökonomik die Tagung „Der nächste Crash als Chance“ in Berlin. Einige der spannenden Vorträge und Podiumsdiskussionen hat monneta an diesem Tag mit der Kamera begleitet.

„Szenarien und Ziele für ein zukunftsfähiges Finanzsystem“ lautet der Titel der ersten Podiumsdiskussion dieses Tages. Unter der Moderation von Frau Dr. Brigitte Preissl gaben die Teilnehmer Prof. Dr. Reinhard Loske, Prof. Dr. Brigitte Young und Hannes Böhm jeweils ein kurzes Statement, diskutierten das obrige Thema und beantworteten Publikumsfragen.

Am 07. Februar 2020 veranstaltete das Netzwerk Plurale Ökonomik die Tagung „Der nächste Crash als Chance“ in Berlin. Einige der spannenden Vorträge und Podiumsdiskussionen hat monneta an diesem Tag mit der Kamera begleitet.

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„Umgang mit der nächsten Krise – Prävention, Maßnahmen und Reformen“ war das abschließende Thema des Tages. Moderiert von Dr. Gerhard Schick diskutierten die Podiums-Teilnehmer Prof. Dr. Emanuel Mönch (Deutsche Bundesbank), Prof. Dr. Dorothea Schäfer und Jakob von Weizsäcker ihre Ansichten und die Ergebnisse aus den Workshops des Tages.

 

Armut, Ausbeutung oder auch die bestehende Wohnungsnot – unsere Gesellschaftssysteme stoßen an ihre Grenzen. Der Sozialreformer, Kaufmann und Finaztheoretiker  Johann Silvio Gesell (1862-1930) liefert Ansätze zur Lösung dieser Probleme und entwarf Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts eine Alternative zum herrschenden Kapitalismus.

Seine Ideen werden noch in der krisengeschüttelten Wirtschaftslage neu interpretiert. Und nach seiner Theorie könnten wir mit der derzeitigen Niedrig- oder Minuszins-Politik auf dem Weg zu einer gerechteren Gesellschaft sein.

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Die Sendung des SWR2 vom 06.03.2020 und das entsprechende Manuskript, mit zusätzlichen Informationen zu Johann Silvio Gesell finden Sie hier.

 

 

 

 

Die Monetative e.V. veranstaltet in Zeiten der Corona-Krise nun im wöchentlichen Rhythmus Web-Gespräche zu jeweils einem Aspekt des umfangreichen Themas „Monetäre und wirtschaftliche Aspekte der Corona-Krise“. Nach einer kurzen fachlichen Einführung zu Beginn, wird es den Teilnehmern ermöglicht sich in die Diskussion mit einzubringen.

Weitergeführt wird die Reihe am 14.05.2020 um 19 Uhr, das Gespräch wird wieder eine Stunde dauern. Melden Sie sich hier für die Teilnahme am Gespräch an. Experte ist der Berliner Jurist Prof. Dr. Markus C. Kerber, der auch Verfahrensbeteiligter bei dem oben genannten Urteil ist.

 

Zur Ihrer Vorbereitung:

 

Diskussion zur Monetären Staatsfinanzierung

Im Endeffekt geht es auch im Urteil des BVerfG um die Frage, wie das viele Geld zur Krisenbewältigung aufgebracht werden kann. Norbert Häring listet einige interessante Meinungsäußerungen zu diesem Thema in Europa auf: Wie soll die zusätzliche Staatsfinanzierung verbucht werden – als Zuschuss oder als Verschuldung? Da gibt es einige Möglichkeiten! Erinnert sei auch nochmal an unseren Vorschlag einer Ausnahmeregelung für das Verbot der Monetären Staatsfinanzierung für Notfälle, analog zur Regelung im deutschen Grundgesetz zur sogenannten Schuldenbremse.

Business Administration. From Barter to Bitcoin and Beyond: Re-imagining Money for a Sustainable Future

First Cycle Course. 7.5 credits

The Lund University offers an interesting course of Business Administration.

Learning outcomes

Growing inequality, apocalyptic environmental damage, and the protracted effects of a global financial crisis have resulted in a discussion on the role of our monetary system for the organization of society. At the same time, new technological and financial developments are giving rise to much experimentation on new forms of money. This course looks at various attempts to “re-imagine money.” It explores opportunities for addressing big societal challenges and asks in particular how new forms of money can contribute to developing more just and equal societies. A passing grade on the course will be awarded to students who:

1. Knowledge and understanding

  • Demonstrate an understanding of how our national and international monetary systems work.
  • Demonstrate an ability to identify relevant research topics within the are of international strategic management of trade and monetary exchange.

2. Competence and skills

  • Demonstrate an ability to integrate knowledge on international management, monetary theory, and digital technologies to analyse, assess and deal with issues related to various forms of local, national and international monies.
  • Demonstrate an ability to independently identify a social / environmental challenge and formulate a design for a monetary system addressing that challenge,
  • Demonstrate an ability to assess the potentials and limitations of particular monetary system and clearly present arguments of its strengths and weaknesses.
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the future challenges and main issues related to international strategic management of glocal monetary systems.

3. Judgement and approach

  • Demonstrate an ability to assess the boundaries of the current monetary system and discuss the opportunities and limitations for change agents to impact it.
  • Demonstrate an ability to identify their need of further knowledge concerning monetary systems and technologies and to take responsibility for developing their knowledge.

Course content

Imagine you have the possibility to re-imagine our monetary system: Where would you start? How would you build it on the new monetary technologies? How would you work to make it more conducive to just and equal societies? The global financial crisis of 2008 marked the beginning of an intense discussion on the consequences of our monetary system on the organization of our societies. The concentration of wealth in “the one percent” in parallel to austerity policies, the increase of prices of financial assets parallel to a retrenchment of the welfare state have resulted in a generalised realisation that the monetary system has not been serving the interests of the population as a whole. The discussion on the organization of our monetary system is however as much driven by frustration towards the financial system as it is by excitement about new monetary developments. New payment systems (such as Swish or Apple Pay), the decline of cash, the emergence of digital currencies (such as Bitcoin and Ethereum) as well as local currencies (such as Time Dollars, Regiogeld or Transition Town currencies) and the development of new financial practices (such as P2P lending, crowdfunding or ICOs) are opening up our thinking on money and our possibilities to re-imagine, re-organize and re-claim money. That is, the changing nature of money is giving rise to a wave of experimentation on new forms of money. These experiments see money not as an obstruction but as a vehicle for constructing more sustainable economies, more resilient communities and more fair societies. While these new monetary ideas and real-life efforts may seem contradictory, money scholars, practitioners and activists agree that money needs to be re-organized, that this can be done from the bottom-up, and that we can indeed imaginatively engage with the future of money. This course is addressed to students who want to explore the idea that money can be re-designed. Students will be exposed to the theoretical and practical realities that come with “re-imagining money”. The course does not require previous knowledge in neither finance nor economics or technology. It however does ask students to be open to actively engage in re-thinking the monetary landscape. We will do this through a monetary workshop at the end of the course, in which student groups will be designing a monetary system for a particular social purpose.

Course design

The course combines a variety of methods, ranging from traditional lectures, case studies, interaction-based pedagogy, reading groups, student debates, group work, and money co-creation workshops. Students are expected to participate actively in class.

Assessment

Examination in this course is a two-step process:

  • Mid-course written exam; max. 2 pages. In a short written essay, students will be asked to describe an aspect of the current monetary system.
  • Final written take-home assignment; max. 5 pages. Students will be asked to design a monetary system to address a particular social / environmental challenge. In a written essay, students will be asked to present the monetary system they have designed and discuss its potential and limitations. This exam needs to engage the literature discussed throughout the course. The examiner, in consultation with Disability Support Services, may deviate from the regular form of examination in order to provide a permanently disabled student with a form of examination equivalent to that of a student without a disability. Sub-courses that are part of this course can be found in an appendix at the end of this document.

Entry requirements

Entry requirements for this course are that the student has taken courses in Business Administration corresponding to 30 credits

 

Further information can be found on:

www.lunduniversity.lu.se/Business-Administration-course

www.ijccr.net/Business-Administration-course