Meet the Green Dollar Society
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New Zealand Herald
14 July 2001 
By Simon Collins

When Lynette Hansen and Greg McNamara get married, they 
will honeymoon on "green dollars."  

The couple, who live at Thorntons Bay near Thames, live on a 
low income from craftwork and accident compensation. Their 
planned honeymoon through New Zealand would be 
impossible if they had to pay cash.  

But they are members of the Thames Local Energy Trading 
System, which allows them to build up credits in "green dollars" 
by selling home-made bracelets, necklaces, cards and 
souvenirs to other exchange members.  

They can then use those credits to buy services in green 
dollars - including homestays with members of other green 
dollar exchanges. Or gardening.  

"Being a craftsperson, I hate gardening, I hate it with a 
passion," Lynette Hansen said. "I was able to get people 
coming in to do my garden for me, which meant I could do my 
crafts."  

The couple are part of a growing phenomenon of local trading 
systems around the world - a surprising counterpoint to the 
globalisation of the world's dominant producers.   

In Australasia, the leading example is Bartercard, founded in 
1991, whose NZ turnover was $160 million in the past year - 
enough to allow it to be the major sponsor of rugby league's 
Bartercard Cup.  

Its 5000 NZ members are mostly small businesses trading an 
average of $40,000 a year on Bartercard. Transactions are 
similar to other credit card purchases, except that Bartercard 
charges no interest and its cards can be used only to buy from 
other Bartercard members.  

In effect, Bartercard acts like a bank, letting members buy from 
other members on credit, on condition that they sell items to 
other members.  

But it is more than a bank, because its 120 staff are an 
extended sales force for its members, finding them new 
customers among other Bartercard members to make sure 
everyone can balance their sales and purchases.  

For this, members pay a negotiable $975 plus GST in cash to 
join, and then fees of 5.5 per cent in cash and 1 per cent in 
barter on every Bartercard sale or purchase. Adding the fees 
paid by sellers and buyers means Bartercard takes 13 per cent 
on every transaction.  

It is a risk-free way of buying things people could not otherwise 
afford, because Bartercard's trade coordinators guarantee that 
they will help businesses earn back any money that they spend 
on barter.  

"I have a client who has a bin hire and firewood depot," said 
Duane Bennett, a senior trade coordinator.  

"I called him because I found him some garden trellises and 
dog kennels. He's in a semi-rural area and I said, 'You can get 
these trellises because you have landscape systems, and dog 
kennels would look great - how about we spend some of your 
current credit balance and purchase some trellises and dog 
kennels?'  

"That's an additional product that complements his product. I 
put them in contact, and away we go."  

Margaret Walsh of the Titirangi hair and beauty salon Face & 
Body used Bartercard last month to buy a bracelet from 
Henderson's Auckland Ring Company for a staff member who 
was leaving.  

In turn, she sells haircuts and beauty treatments to other 
Bartercard members, and tries to steer them to quiet times of 
the day.  

"They are aware that there is a really busy time from 5.30 to 9 
pm. So they fill your book [at off-peak times]. It's wonderful."  

Most members do no more than 15 to 20 per cent of their 
business in barter, because they need real cash to pay many 
costs, including taxes. Inland Revenue charges GST on 
Bartercard transactions, and requires payment in cash.  

Another Australian-based group, Business Barter Exchange, 
and Christchurch's Tradecard have entered the local market.  

Tradecard, started in 1999 by former Bartercard member 
Lindsay Welch, charges fees of only 4 per cent each way (8 
per cent in total) on barter deals and, unlike Bartercard, allows 
members to do deals that are only partly on barter and partly in 
cash (for higher fees). It has 600 members.  

In contrast, "green dollar" schemes like those in Thames and 
Taranaki use volunteers to avoid charging commission. But 
they operate on the same principles.  

In Thames, the 180 members ring an answerphone to report 
every transaction. These are then picked up daily and recorded 
on a computer.  

At the monthly market, which accounts for more than half the 
transactions of between $4000 and $10,000 a month, sellers 
are given forms on which all sales are recorded. The next 
market is next Saturday, starting in the Grahamstown Hall at 
8.30 am.  

Wayne Smith, a former printer who took redundancy when the 
local paper shifted its printing out of town, has built a tiny, 
cramped home workshop where he repairs old books and 
makes novelty pads and books out of bamboos and possum 
skins.  

He and his wife, Suzanne, use their earnings to buy extras for 
their three children aged from 5 to 11.  

"It has in the past been very important when things have been 
really tight - anything from fresh fruit and vegetables to clothing, 
toys, even labour to help with gardening and that," he said.  

The Thames exchange's quarterly directory of members' 
services, or Green Pages, has been supplemented by an e-
mail network connecting 66 of the 180 members - allowing 
members to list and trade things more quickly.  

But organiser Maureen Mallinson said the group would never 
give up the monthly market because people liked the social 
contact.  

In Rotorua, a small group of 40 will hold an "intertrade" market 
tomorrow at the Sunset Primary School, at 1 pm.  

Organiser Richard Totton said the group had acquired too 
many credits from members of other exchanges homestaying 
with Rotorua members on holiday. In return, it needed people 
from other exchanges to provide items for sale.  

He was unemployed when the group started eight years ago 
and was able to earn green dollars through gardening, rubbish 
removal and labouring.  

"When I was unemployed, the benefit came in, the bills got 
paid and what was left over went on food," he said.  

"You couldn't afford cakes or jars of jam or something like that. 
Just being able to get those, and clothing, from within the 
group is often a help.  

"Sometimes it's just having a group of people that you can call 
on for help. One of our members had a flat battery. I went 
round with a pair of jumper leads and got her car started. That's 
just having people you can call on rather than having to pay 
someone.  

"It's the social aspect. I have developed a lot of friends within 
the group, and there is always someone worse off than me that 
needs help. If I can help them for an hour or two a week, it 
makes me feel good and it helps them."  

Exchanges can be harder to sustain in cities.  

In the 1990s, Auckland Green Dollars was the largest such 
exchange in the world, because everyone who joined the 
People's Centre was automatically entitled to join Green 
Dollars. But it has faded away.  

Suzanne Paul, a volunteer at the Combined Beneficiaries 
Union who is keen to re-establish the group, said the old 
system was destroyed by inflation.  

"When you got someone in Green Dollars charging $60 an 
hour for their labour - that is three or four years ago - I tackled 
the person for doing it. It was meant to be an economic and 
social support system more than anything else."  

But one small group still flourishes in Auckland.  

It is the Western Area Green Dollar Exchange System 
(Wages), which will hold its monthly market today at the Grey 
Lynn Community Centre in Richmond Rd, from 10 am to 1 pm.  

Valerie Longworth, who leads the 110-member group, said that 
when the system started in 1993, many members were 
unemployed and green dollars helped to keep them afloat.  

Although there are still some beneficiaries, the mix has 
changed.  

"A lot of them work, so they only have the evenings and 
weekends to do things."  

Wages issues "market money" in denominations such as 50c 
and $1. Buyers get tokens when they arrive. The amounts are 
deducted from their green dollar accounts, and at the end of 
the day sellers hand the tokens back to the organisers to have 
their earnings recorded.  

Recognising the social value of these small transactions, 
Inland Revenue has ruled that green dollar earnings are not 
taxable unless, as in Bartercard, they are part of a genuine 
business.  

But Work and Income NZ has taken a harder line. Spokesman 
Pat Thomas said regular green dollar earnings were treated the 
same as cash, and benefits would be cut if beneficiaries 
earned above the allowable limit.  

That limit is $80 a week for most benefits, but the 
accommodation benefit is cut by 25c in the dollar from the first 
$1 of regular earnings.  

Green dollar groups have lobbied the Government to get a 
bigger exemption for green dollar earnings.  

Mr McNamara, a former mechanic who now lives on accident 
compensation, admitted that he was sceptical about green 
dollars when he first met Lynette Hansen.  

But now he can see the benefits.  

A quarter of her jewellery sales and cards are now in green 
dollars, allowing her to buy "clothes, food, jewellery for my 
kids" as well as gardening.  

Said Lynette Hansen: "I couldn't imagine my life without it now, 
just for the social aspect - I have met some really lovely 
people. It becomes a way of life."  

Links 

Bartercard: http://www.bartercard.co.nz/
Trade Card: http://www.alt-finance.co.nz/
Business Barter Exchange: http://www.bbx.aust.com/
Grey Lynn Community Centre: http://www.come.to/greylynn

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vivian Hutchinson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
phone 06-753-4434 fax 06-759-4648
P.O.Box 428
New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand

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