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Chiemgauer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chiemgauer is the name of a REGIO community currency started on 2003 in Prien am Chiemsee, Bavaria, Germany. It is named after the Chiemgau, a famous region around
the Chiemsee.
Christian
Gelleri, a high school teacher, started this project with his students who are
in charge of designing and printing vouchers, administration, accounting, advertising
and other services. Now it is supported by a German regional currencies'
network called RegioNetzwerk.
Contents [hide]
1 Why
2 How it works
3 Statistics (2007)
4 References
Why
1. Employment
creation: students are hired to work, earning some allowances.
2. Promotion of
cultural, educational and environmental activities: the Chiemgauer system
supports non-profits who work for such purposes
3. Promotion of
sustainability: organic food and renewable energy among others
4. Strengthening the
solidarity: enhancing the human relationship between local shoppers and
businesses
5. Stimulation of
local economy: Chiemgauer retains purchasing power within the region better
than the Euro and favors local small
businesses, stimulating transactions by the demurrage.
[edit] How it works
Bills
of 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 Chiemgauer were issued. Each one is equivalent to
respectively to 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 Euro.
To
maintain them in circulation, every three months, you have to put on the
banknotes a "scrip", corresponding to the 2% of the banknote value. This
system, called demurrage, is a sort of currency circulation tax and was
invented by Silvio
Gesell.
Chiemgauer,
considered to be equivalent to the Euro, circulates as follows within Prien and
neighboring towns:
* Non-profits:
purchase 100 Chiemgauer at 97 Euro and resell them at 100 Euro, therefore
earning 3 Euro to be spent for their own activities.
* Shoppers:
exchange 100 Euro into 100 Chiemgauer at a non-profit they support, allowing it
to have extra cash income without donating. Also, spend Chiemgauer at local
businesses at face value, therefore helping both local non-profits and
businesses without any further cost.
* Businesses:
accept 100 Chiemgauer at face value and spend them for their own purchases or
exchange 102 Chiemgauer into 97 Euro, losing 5% for commission but earning more
by attracting Chiemgauer members to their products and/or services. Of this, 2
Euro goes for administrative costs, and 3 Euro replaces the original discount
to the non-profit.
* Chiemgauer
Office: sell 100 Chiemgauer at 100 Euro, and the office repays 97.85 Euro for
re-exchange, thereby retaining 2 Euro to cover its administration cost.
[edit] Statistics (2007)
* Number
of member: 1820
* Number
of businesses: 550
* Amount
of Chiemgauer in circulation: 90,000 (17,933 electronic)
* Turnover
(2006): 1,450,000 Euro
* Income
for non-profit (2006): 16,800 Chiemgauer
* Total
income for non-profit since inception: 36,458 Euro
[edit] References
* http://www.chiemgauer.info/
* Germans get by without
the euro
The Chiemgauer gains acceptance in Bavaria.
Retrieved
from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiemgauer"
Category: Community currencies
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This
page was last modified 00:32, 21 January 2007. All
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