There are several models.

An informational monetary system with no interest in which there is only 1 democratic bank that pays everyone a fixed amount of money to buy everything people need. Everyone sells and buys at their own prices which are based on the persons lifestyle. You may earn extra money to buy things you want (not need) by doing meaningful things and coming up with solution on how to produce even more and better goods in the most efficient and sustainable way in abundance for everyone. That system is proposed by a larger group in Europe.

Negative interest monetary system or demurrage currency system in which money loses value over time. This would make hoarding money a bad idea and people would invest even in projects with a negative ROI as long as that negative rate is "better" as the rate in which their money would demurrage anyway. The model also suggests taxation based on the use of the commons instead of earning money.
http://sacred-economics.com/

A common weal based economy where people and companies create a common weal balance sheet as their main balance and receive beneficial bonuses from the state for reach a higher common weal score. This would shift the incentive away from competition and personal profit to common weal and cooperation. (This model seems to ignore the exp() debt problem as well as technological unemployment.)
http://www.gemeinwohl-oekonomie.org/en/

Or a socioeconomic model that totally obsoletes money. People produce the highest quality goods and whoever needs anything just takes/borrows whatever they need. We all know that our technology is capable of doing just that ...
http://www.thevenusproject.com/
http://www.freeworldcharter.org/en
http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/

The equal money system.
http://equalmoney.org/

etc. ...

On 01/08/2013 07:01 PM, Dimitry Volfson wrote:
Money is a form of rationing. If no one makes money anymore, that will necessitate a new (or different) form of rationing.




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