How Might Cell Phone Money Change the Financial System?
Journal of Financial Transformation, Vol. 30. pp. 33-42, 2010
14 Pages Posted: 9 May 2010 Last revised: 15 Dec 2010
Date Written: December 7, 2010
Abstract
The emergence of cloud banking in developing economies from billions of cell phones transacting both legal tender and informal units of accounts has created a need to reconsider habits of thinking about the nature of money and banking in advanced societies. The dysfunctional nature of modern money and banking is revealed by considering cell phone units of account based on four historical forms of money: (i) the current form of synthetic or “fiat” legal tender that can earn interest (ii) fiat money that does not earn interest but has a usage fee (iii) “Free-money” issued privately with a usage fee and (iv) “natural” money redeemable into specified goods and/or services with a usage fee. The value of a “green” form of natural money, redeemable into units of renewable electricity, becomes fixed by the investment cost of generators to create an inflation resistant unit of account. The paper identifies green dollars as offering a competitive medium of exchange for the “invisible hands” of (i) investors, (ii) Islamic economies and businesses, (iii) green voters, (iv) governments seeking to reduce the need for carbon taxing or trading and (v) those seeking a reserve currency in case the financial system fails.
Keywords: Cost Carrying Money, Electronic-Money, Financialization, Free Banking, Islamic Banking, Natural Money
JEL Classification: E42, E50, G20
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Building Sustainable Communities: Tools and Concepts for Self-Reliant Change
By Shann Turnbull, C. George Benello, ...
-
Sustaining Society with Renewable Energy Dollars and Ecological Property Rights
-
Affordable Housing Policy: Not Identifiable with Orthodox Economic Analysis