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RemovingTheShackles – Spain Returning To The Barter System – 22 February 2013

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PurpleSkyz

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RemovingTheShackles – Spain Returning To The Barter System – 22 February 2013




Posted on February 22, 2013 by lucas2012infos | Leave a comment



RemovingTheShackles – Spain Returning To The Barter System – 22 February 2013 Spain-flag(Lucas
: We have seen these alternative economies and exchange systems develop
all over the world from Lets to local money, etc. It shows we can live
without the old system if we want to. The new opportunity is to get on
board with OPPT and learn to live in the long run also without money
systems as we know them.)

For those that said “It can’t be done”

Laia Serrano, the economist who founded BarcelonActua a year ago,
says that it will be people power that fixes Spain, not the government.

“I am convinced that the solution to this crisis will be from the
bottom up,” she said. “It is necessary, though, that people realize it.”

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2013/02/20/spanish-bartering/1894365/

In hard-hit Spain, bartering becomes means of getting by

Meritxell Mir, Special for USA TODAY6:08p.m. EST February 20, 2013


RemovingTheShackles – Spain Returning To The Barter System – 22 February 2013 Xxx-no-euros-accepted-tal-3-4_3_r536_c534
(Photo: Xavier Sule)



STORY HIGHLIGHTS



  • Some Spaniards are bartering their way through the recession
  • ‘Sharing economy’ has grown since economic crisis hit
  • Spain’s unemployment rate is 26%; 55% among young workers



BARCELONA — With two small children and no income for the past two
years, Antonio Delgado, 44, says things were so bad he had considered
taking his life.

Then a few months ago, Delgado found out about a group that rents
small parcels of farmland cheap near his town of La Rinconada in
southern Spain. Now he’ s bringing home boxes of tomatoes, onions,
peppers, lettuce, zucchinis and pumpkins. But he is not selling them.

Delgado and others are bartering, or trading, their way through a
recession that has lasted years and left more than a quarter of the
workforce unemployed. Tens of thousands of households have no wage
earners, but they have skills and time on their hands to do work that
can be traded for things they need but have no money to buy.

“I had no clue about agriculture,” Delgado said. “But this has changed my life.”

Banker Julio Gisbert, author of the book and blog Living Without a
Job, says Spaniards are doing what makes sense in these tough times.

“It is possible to live without a job, and that doesn’t mean living without working,” Gisbert says.

Trading produce for other services and merchandise is one of the many
unconventional ways the Spanish are making ends meet in what has been
described as the new “sharing economy” that has developed here since the
economic crisis hit more than four years ago.

According to the Spanish government, more than half a million
families have no income. The unemployment rate has climbed to 26%, but
among young workers it is as astonishing 55%.

The deepest economic crisis in Spain’s modern history is rooted in a
housing boom financed by cheap loans to builders and home buyers who
went bust. Homes were not worth what was borrowed to buy or build them.

Spain borrowed to lend the banks money to survive, but that put the
national government in a budget deficit. Regional governments that spent
budget surpluses in boom years were forced to end public spending and
cut benefits and jobs, hobbling economic growth. The economy, which grew
3.7% a year on average from 1999 to 2007, has since contracted at an
annual rate of 1% since.

With few jobs and no disposable income, bartering and other ways of
exchanging goods and services are increasingly seen as good
alternatives.

Some Spaniards are using so-called time banks to “deposit” time,
knowledge and skills and trade them for things they need. All services
have the same value, whether it is one hour of teaching a foreign
language or one hour of cleaning house.

Teresa Sanchez, 55, is part of the Time Bank in Valladolid in western
Spain. She has deposited offers of Japanese language classes, massage
and company for the elderly. In return, she has received English
lessons, appliance repairs and haircuts for her son.

“I first joined because I like the idea of people helping each other
as it used to be long ago, but it is true that it is nice economic
help,” said Sanchez. “The world would work better without money.”

The number of time banks in Spain has doubled to 318 in the past
three years, according to the Association of Time Banks. SocialCar.com
allows people to rent their private cars to other individuals while
JoinUp Taxi makes it easy for people to share taxis to the same
destination. Nolotiro.org (“I Won’t Throw It Out”) allows people to give
away things they don’t need anymore, such as clothing or tools.

Mi Huerto Compartido (My Shared Garden) allows land owners to “lend”
ground in exchange for part of the harvest. And Truequebook.es users
barter school books and other goods for children.

Delgado got his plot of farmland from My Harvest Ecological Gardens,
which rents 540-square-foot parcels of land for $40 a month. He works
the land 20 hours a week and exchanges produce with other small farmers
so he can get the wide variety of food his family needs.

Besides the cybermarket places, nearly 100 bartering markets have
appeared in Catalonia alone, according to Intercanvis.net, a site that
tracks the bartering economy in this northeastern region of Spain.

“The main reason why people start using these sites is economic,
whether it is to save money, make money or get goods or services without
money,” said Albert Canigueral, editor of ConsumoColaborativo.com,
Spain’s biggest site on the sharing economy. “However, once people have
tried them out a couple of times, their mentality changes and they start
looking at alternatives to traditional shopping as their only option.”

Unlike other European countries, where thrift shops thrive, or in the
United States, where garage sales are common, Spaniards have always
been reluctant to buy used goods. In fact, just a few years ago, it
would have been unimaginable to hear Spaniards boast over their newest
second-hand acquisition.

“In Spain, those who buy things that have been used carry the stigma
of not being able to buy brand new stuff,” explained Joana Conill, a
researcher of alternative economic cultures at Universitat Oberta de
Catalunya.

The crisis and social media are changing people’s habits and
perceptions so “the attachment of people to objects is diminishing,”
said Jordi Griera, president of the Institute for Management and Human
Values in Barcelona. He and others says that the economic crisis has
also brought Spanish society closer together in a positive way.

“The sharing economy is the gate to a cultural change in which people
rediscover the power of getting connected with other fellow citizens
not only to consume, but also to produce for each other, educate each
other, finance each other,” said Canigueral.

BarcelonActua is a case in point. More than 7,000 people participate
in this local “favor bank” where people help others without necessarily
expecting anything in return. There is no control over who gets or gives
what — everything is based on good faith.

Anna Daura, 49, of Barcelona, posted on the organization’s website
requesting someone to help her clean out an apartment she owned that had
been nearly destroyed by the previous tenant. She had lost her job a
few weeks before and had little money to pay for the job. Minutes after
posting her ad numerous people responded that they would help “for no
money.”

A few days later, a dozen people went to her apartment with “incredible energy” and left it spotless, she said.

“Nothing like this had ever happened to me,” Daura said. Grateful for
the help, she is now counseling other members of the network on how to
start a business, her particular expertise.

Laia Serrano, the economist who founded BarcelonActua a year ago,
says that it will be people power that fixes Spain, not the government.

“I am convinced that the solution to this crisis will be from the
bottom up,” she said. “It is necessary, though, that people realize it.”

Rocio Avila, 41, did. She lost her job two years ago and only has the
$800 a month her ex-husband gives her to support their two children.
When her boiler broke a few days ago, she posted that she needed help to
repair it.

“Someone who didn’t even know me offered to give me the $260 I needed
for a new one,” said Avila, in tears. “Of course this helped me
financially but also emotionally — meeting these people is also a gift.”

www.removingtheshaclkes.net / link to original article


Thanks to: http://lucas2012infos.wordpress.com

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