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Mutual credit
Transaction where creditors and debtors lend between each other From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Mutual credit" (sometimes called "multilateral barter" or "credit clearing") is a term mostly used in the field of complementary currencies to describe a common, usually small-scale, endogenous money system.
In a mutual credit system, creditors and debtors are the same people lending to each other. Transactions are recorded on a ledger, and a given individual or firm's balance is the sum of all their transactions positive or negative. All participants start with a balance of zero, and earn credits by selling goods or services, and can purchase goods or services by going into debt (but only to a set limit, based on what they can offer to other participants in the network.)[1]
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Economics
Once a common unit of account is agreed upon, and the extent to which members can draw credit is limited, a mutual credit system resembles a money system in which currency is created and destroyed with every transaction.
Meaning of 'mutual'
Practitioners and theoreticians in the complementary currency movement do not use the term in a consistent way. It could mean that [2][self-published source?]
- creditors and debts are the same people at different times
- default risk is shared between all members of the circle (not necessarily distributed equally or even in a managed way)
- credit allocation is decided in a participative forum.
Ripple has also been described as mutual credit, even though credit is extended unilaterally (from one account to another), and might not be reciprocated.
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Examples and types of systems
Social institutions described as mutual credit systems include trade exchanges, local exchange trading systems, and timebanking associations, each with a number of offshoots and variations, and their own understanding of what mutual credit means.[citation needed]
One example of this type of system is the Sardex exchange system, created by a group of five people in Sardinia in 2010.[1] Their system requires annual payments by participating companies ranging from 200 to 3,000 euros, (based on the size of the company) to support maintenance of the electronic network.[1] Because the system allows a new participant to spend up to a allocated limit (new participants get unsecured credit) they have had occasional problems of needing to sue participants to recover that debt.[1]
See also
- Barter exchange – Direct reciprocal exchange of goods or services without the use of money
- Multilateral exchange – Transaction of three or more parties
- Mutualism – Anarchist school of thought and socialist economic theory
- Savings pools – Form of peer-to-peer banking
- WIR Bank – Swiss bank that issues a complementary currency (WIR franc)
- Collaborative finance – Settlement without third party involvement
- Inside money – Money issued by private intermediaries
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References
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