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Money - The New Rules of the Game / by Christian Felber

Publisher (Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer)
Year 2017
Edition 1st ed. 2017.
Authors *Felber, Christian author
SpringerLink (Online service)

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OB00175347 Springer Economics and Finance eBooks (電子ブック) 9783319673523

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Material Type E-Book
Media type 機械可読データファイル
Size XX, 221 p. 1 illus : online resource
Notes Preface: Money and Democracy– an Overdue Wedding -- Introduction: A Coercitive and Intransparent Financial System -- Part I: The Process towards a New Monetary Order -- 1. Tamer Wanted: Who will Restrain the Global Monetary and Finance System? -- 2. Rewriting the Rules of the Game: The Democratic Monetary Convention -- 3. The Basis: Money as a Public Good -- Part II: The Content - Cornerstones of a Democratic Monetary System -- 1. Who Creates Money? -- 2. Sovereign Money Reform -- 3. Democratic Central Bank -- 4. Solving the Problem of Sovereign Debt -- 5. Bank Lending Regulations -- 6. Common Good Oriented Banks -- 7. EU and Global Financial Supervision -- 8. Derivatives – Close the Casino -- 9. Secure Pensions -- 10. Global Tax Cooperation -- 11. Income and Ownership Caps - “Negative Feedback” -- 12. Currencies – Time for a Bretton Woods II -- Epilog I: Planned Economy in Peking und Zürich -- Epilog II: End of the Dollar Hegemony? -- Epilog III: Local and regional complementary currencies -- Part III: Kick Off -- 1. The Path to the First Convention -- 2. Questionnaire for the Convention -- Acknowledgements -- Index
This book advocates a holistic reform of the current monetary and financial system dealing with the issues of money creation, central banks, loans, stock markets, tax justice, pension security and the international monetary system - “Bretton Woods II”. Its innovative approach presents several alternatives for each cornerstone, in addition to introducing a participatory democratic process whereby sovereign citizens can themselves determine the rules governing the new financial and monetary system. With “democratic money conventions” in each municipality, where the elements of this new money system are discussed and decided on in a participatory manner, and a federal money covenant which then elaborates a template for a referendum about the future “money constitution”, a true “sovereign” could progressively convert money from a financial weapon into a democratic tool. The envisaged democratic monetary system, by providing equal opportunities for every member of society to participate in the development of the “new rules of the game”, turns money progressively into a public good which increases the freedom for all. The new system furthermore drives the enhancement of constitutional and relational values such as human dignity, solidarity, justice, sustainability, or democracy. Money should serve life and should serve the common good. The “Bank for the Common Good” Project, which was initiated in Austria by the author Christian Felber, represents a practical example of his proposals
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-67352-3
Subjects LCSH:Financial services industry
LCSH:Macroeconomics
LCSH:Business ethics
LCSH:Human rights
LCSH:Economics
FREE:Financial Services
FREE:Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics
FREE:Business Ethics
FREE:Human Rights
FREE:Political Economy and Economic Systems
Classification LCC:HG1501-3550
DC23:332.17
ID 8000059827
ISBN 9783319673523

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