“Go to one of several banks there, hand a teller $95 and get back $100 worth ofBerkShares, a nice little discount designed to reel in users. BerkShares are printed on special paper (by a local business, naturally–a subsidiary of Crane Paper Co., which has been printing U.S. greenbacks since 1879). And since the program’s inception in 2006, more than $2.5 million in BerkShares have circulated through bakeries, vets’ offices and some 400 other businesses that choose to accept the colorful bills, which feature famous former Berkshire residents, including W.E.B. Du Bois and Norman Rockwell.”
What’s the point of all this pretty, community-printed currency? Money spent
at locally owned companies tends to create more business for local suppliers, accountants, etc. The New Economics Foundation (NEF), a London think tank, compared the effects of purchasing produce at a supermarket and at a farmer’s market and found that twice the money stayed in a community when folks bought locally. A study of Grand Rapids, Mich., released last fall by consulting firm Civic Economics, concluded that a 10% shift in market share from chain stores to independents would yield 1,600 new jobs and pump $137 million into the area.
Click here to read the full Time magazine article!
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