The future is unclear not only for Greece, but for the Eurozone itself. One of the architects of the Euro, Bernard Lietaer thinks hard liners in bailout negotiations .
This series of videos captures a lecture Bernard Lietaer provided to Occupy Boulder. This video was recorded during the last currency crisis in Greece and
Recording date: 23. April 2014 Location: School of Business and Economics, Maastricht University Speaker: Prof. Bernard Lietaer Title: In conversation What i... (Prof. Bernard Lietaer On Bitcoin PLEASE!
Former central banker Bernard Lietaer discusses the need for complimentary currencies within nations, the structure of good and bad money and the wide array of solutions that could be adopted by societies wanting new monetary systems.
Recording date: 22. April 2014 Location: School of Business and Economics, Maastricht University Speaker: Prof. Bernard Lietaer Title: Changing our Monetary .
Currency expert Bernard Lietaer states that the fundamental problem with our present-day monetary system is that it is not sufficiently diverse. It dams and bottlenecks our creative energies, and keeps us trapped in a world of scarcity and suffering. But we actually have the capacity to create a very different reality by enabling our energies to move more freely where they are most needed, including towards cleaning up our environment, building adequate housing and providing good quality healthcare, etc.
Currency expert Bernard Lietaer states that the fundamental problem with our present-day monetary system is that it is not sufficiently diverse. It dams and bottlenecks our creative energies, and keeps us trapped in a world of scarcity and suffering. But we actually have the capacity to create a very different reality by enabling our energies to move more freely where they are most needed, including towards cleaning up our environment, building adequate housing and providing good quality healthcare, etc.
Bitcoin might seem like a new idea for many, but the concept of complementary currencies goes way back. The Agenda asks: what is currency, and when is national currency not enough?
Occupy Wall Street has directed our attention to the extreme concentration of wealth resulting from decades of policy designed to trickle down prosperity. Through using a single type of bank debt currency, we allocate our labor and resources to benefit a global elite instead of our communities. Can we engage our local leaders and municipal governments to break this currency monoculture? Can global examples of currency ecology provide a map for improving educational experiences, enhancing the arts and building resilience to the fragility of central bank finance mechanisms?
In 2010, the IMF reported that 425 countries had gone through a major systemic economic crash over the previous 30 years -- that's 10 countries per year suffering the consequences of poorly designed monetary systems.
The current monopoly of conventional money is a main source for unsustainable behaviors. New currency designs – among which crypto-currencies, but not only c...
Today we still use an industrial age monetary construct while we have technologies to do things differently. Greece could create a precedent with a different way of addressing economic problems, says one of the architects of the euro, Bernard...
Bernard Lietaer, author, financial expert, and co-designer of the ECU (the monetary mechanism that later became the euro) presented compelling arguments to show that there is a structural flaw in the current monetary system that generates all the current problems and repeated financial and monetary crises, including the eurozone crisis. It is also ecologically unsustainable as it encourages climate change and over-consumption.
Bernard Lietaer & Jacqui Dunne, co-authors, Rethinking Money join Thom Hartmann. During the past four decades - there have been around 10 countries experiencing some kind of financial or monetary crisis each year. Could turning to alternative currencies help relieve some of the burden that nations are facing today - and improve the global economic outlook?
This lecture took place recently in Italy and does a great job of explaining the principles of MMT. Get the free 7 Deadly Innocent Frauds ebook (free) here.
Bernard Lietaer explains why shifting the paradigm from monoculture to monetary ecosystem is essential for a prosperous world that stays within its ecological boundaries. Part of the CCS conference series.
Economic instability is created by the the monoculture of money, according to Bernard Lietaer, in this lecture. Lietaer calls for a greater diversity of alte.
Currency expert Bernard Lietaer states that the fundamental problem with our present-day monetary system is that it is not sufficiently diverse. It dams and bottlenecks our creative energies, and keeps us trapped in a world of scarcity and suffering. But we actually have the capacity to create a very different reality by enabling our energies to move more freely where they are most needed, including towards cleaning up our environment, building adequate housing and providing good quality healthcare, etc.
Economic instability is created by the the monoculture of money, according to Bernard Lietaer, in this lecture. Lietaer calls for a greater diversity of alte.
In this lecture Bernard Lietaer will argue that the monoculture of money is responsible for the creation of economic instability. Bernard Lietaer is a civil ...
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