Permaculture: our story, our history…

The Trainer Papers: 1

The Trainer Papers were first published in 2010. I am republishing them 11 years after first publication because their perspective may be of historical value to the story of the permaculture design system and associated initiatives like the Transition Towns movement, and because of the upsurge in interest in ideas about sustainability and regenerative systems.

Russ Grayson
PERMACULTURE journal

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Preamble

The Trainer Papers document the late-2009 conversations between retired UNSW lecturer, Ted Trainer, and journalist, Russ Grayson.

The gist of the first of the Trainer Papers is Ted’s friendly critique of the Transition Towns movement which started in the UK then spread to Australia and the USA. When Ted wrote his critique, the movement was more prominent than it is now. A course for transition trainers had recently been held, led by two people from Totnes in the UK, the unofficial centre of the movement. Transition Towns groups were widespread in Australia at the time and attracted permaculture design system practitioners as well as people from outside of permaculture. In essence, Transition Towns was a reinterpretation of permaculture with a more-specific focus.

Russ writes about the permaculture design system, citizen journalism and adventure travel, and was a tutor and sometime guest lecturer in Ted Trainer’s courses. Ted’s courses were based around the limits to growth ideas first formulated in the Club of Rome’s 1972 book, The Limits to Growth. The book warned how exponential economic and population growth would result in resource depletion.

Ted’s work is visionary and speculative. He is the author of a number of books on sustainability such as The Conserver Society, Abandon Affluence and The Simpler Way. Ted lives on a bush property at Pigface Point in Sydney’s south west where he tinkers with intermediate technologies.

In this first of The Trainer Papers I reproduce verbatim Ted’s thoughts on the Transition Towns movement

Ted Trainer

The Trainer Papers: 1

The Transition Towns movement — its huge significance and a friendly critique

Ted Trainer 26.11.09

THE ONLY WAY the global sustainability and justice predicament can be solved is via something like the inspiring Transition Towns movement. However, unless the movement radically alters its vision and goals I do not think it will make a significant contribution to solving our problems.

The Transition Towns movement began only about 2006 and is growing rapidly. It emerged in the UK, mainly in response to the realisation that the coming of peak oil is likely to leave towns in a desperate situation, and therefore that it is very important that they strive to develop local economic self-sufficiency.

What many within the movement probably don’t know is that for decades some of us in the ‘deep green’ camp have been arguing that the key element in a sustainable and just world has to be small, highly self-sufficient, localised economies under local cooperative control. (See my Abandon Affluence published in 1985 and The Conserver Society, 1995.)

It is therefore immensely encouraging to find that this kind of initiative is not only underway, but booming. I have not the slightest hesitation in saying that if this planet makes it through the next 50 years to sustainable and just ways it will be via some kind of Transition Towns process. However, I also want to argue that if the movement is to have this outcome there are some very important issues it must think carefully about or it could actually come to little or nothing of any social significance. Indeed, in my view if it remains on its present path it will not make a significant contribution to the achievement of a sustainable and just world. This will probably strike transitioners as a surprising and offensive comment, but please consider the following case.

Everything depends on how one sees the state of the planet and the solution. In my view, most people do not understand the nature and magnitude of the situation, including most ‘green’ people. Consequently they are working for goals which cannot solve the problems. It is of the utmost importance that good, green people and transitioners think carefully about the perspective summarised below.

Where we are, and the way out

For decades, some of us have been arguing that the many alarming global problems now crowding in and threatening to destroy us are so big and serious that they cannot be solved within or by consumer-capitalist society. The way of life we have in rich countries is grossly unsustainable and unjust. There is no possibility of all people on earth ever rising to rich world per capita levels of consumption of energy, minerals, timber, water, food, phosphorous etc. These rates of consumption are generating the numerous alarming global problems now threatening our survival. They are already 5–10 times the rates which would be necessary to provide present rich-world living standards to the 9 billion people expected by 2050. Most people have no idea of the magnitude of the overshoot, of how far we are beyond a sustainable level of resource use and environmental impact.

Although present rich world rates of resource use are grossly unsustainable, the supreme goal in consumer-capitalist society is to raise them as fast as possible and without limit. If all expected 9 billion rose to the living standards we in Australia would have by 2080 at present growth rates, then total world economic output would be 60 times as great as it is now. These sorts of multiples totally rule out any hope that technical advance could sustain a growth-and-affluence society.

ln addition, there is the huge problem of global economic injustice. Our way of life would not be possible if rich countries were not taking far more than their fair share of world resources via an extremely unjust global economy and thereby condemning most of the world’s people to deprivation.

Given this analysis of our situation it is not possible to solve the problems without transition to a very different kind of society, one not based on globalisation, market forces, the profit motive, centralisation, representative democracy, or competitive, individualistic acquisitiveness. Above all, it must be a zero-growth economy with a far lower GDP than at present and, most difficult of all, it cannot be an affluent society.

I refer to this alternative as The Simpler Way. Its core principles must be:

  • far simpler material living standards
  • high levels of self-sufficiency within households, national and especially neighbourhoods and towns, with relatively little travel, transport or trade
  • there must be mostly small, local economies in which most of the things we need are produced by local labour from local resources
  • cooperative and participatory local systems
  • a quite different economic system, one not driven by market forces and profit, and in which there is far less work, production and consumption than at present and a large cashless sector, including many free goods from local commons
  • no economic growth at all
  • mostly small local economies under our control via participatory systems and run to meet needs, not to make profits (although I think we could have markets and private firms).
  • most problematic, a radically different culture, in which competitive and acquisitive individualism is replaced by frugal, self-sufficient collectivism.

Some of the elements within The Simpler Way are:

  • participatory democracy via town assemblies
  • neighbourhood workshops
  • many suburban roads dug up and planted with edible landscapes providing free fruit, nuts etc
  • being able to get to decentralised workplaces by bicycle or on foot
  • voluntary community working bees
  • committees
  • many productive commons in the town (fruit, timber, bamboo, herbs…)
  • having to work for money only one or two days a week
  • no unemployment
  • living among many artists and crafts people
  • strong community
  • citizen assemblies making many of the important development and administration decisions
  • much production via hobbies and crafts
  • small farms and family enterprises.

Modern/high technologies and mass production can be used extensively where appropriate, including IT. The Simpler Way will free more resources for purposes such as medical research than are devoted to these at present because most of the present vast quantity of unnecessary production will be phased out.

Because we will be highly dependent on our local ecosystems and on our social cohesion, eg. for most water and food and for effective committees and working bees, all will have a strong incentive to focus on what is best for the town rather than on what is best for themselves as competing individuals. Cooperation and conscientiousness will therefore tend to be automatically rewarded, whereas in consumer society competitive individualism is required and rewarded.

What we will have done is build a new economy, Economy B, under the old one. Economy B will give us the power to produce the basic goods and services we need not just to survive as the old economy increasingly fails to provide, but to give all a high quality of life. The old economy could collapse and we would still be able to provide for ourselves.

Advocates of The Simpler Way believe that its many benefits and sources of satisfaction would provide a much higher quality of life than most people experience in consumer society.

It must be emphasised that The Simpler Way is not optional. If our global situation is as outlined above, then a sustainable and just society in the coming era of scarcity has to be some kind of Simpler Way.

Reform vs radical system replacement

In my view, few green people or transitioners recognise the huge distinction here between trying to reform consumer-capitalist society and trying to replace its major structures and systems. The Simpler Way contradicts the core systems of the present society and cannot be built unless we replace them. Consumer-capitalist society cannot be fixed; it cannot be reformed to not create the alarming global problems we face while still being about the pursuit of affluence and growth, etc.

Consider that sustainability requires shifting to very low levels of per-capita consumption in an economy that has no growth, and that this is impossible in the present economic system. Therefore, a good society cannot be an affluent society, a consumer society.

An economy that focuses on need, rights, justice — especially with respect to the Third World — and ecological sustainability cannot possibly be driven by market forces. Market forces totally ignore needs, rights, justice etc because they only allocate scarce things to those who can pay most for them.

The conditions of severe scarcity we are entering leave no choice but to shift to mostly small, highly self-sufficient local economies run by participatory procedures. This contradicts present political and economic paradigms.

The more the market is allowed to determine what happens, the more cohesion, community, collectivism and solidarity will be driven out. The basic values driving a good society cannot be individualistic, competitive acquisitiveness.

What do we have to do in order to eventually achieve such huge and radical changes? The answer goes far beyond the things that green/transition people are doing now, such as setting up community gardens, food co-ops, recycling centres, permaculture groups, skill banks, home-craft courses, commons, volunteering, downshifting etc. Yes, all these are the kinds of institutions and practices we will have in the new, sustainable and just world so it is understandable that many people within the ecovillage, Transition Towns and green movements assume that if we just work at establishing more and more of these things then in time this will have created the new society. I think this is a serious mistake.

Firstly, these things are easily accommodated within consumer-capitalist society without threatening it, as the lifestyle choices and hobby interests of a relatively few people. They will appeal to only that minority potentially interested in composting or organic food or permaculture etc. Larger numbers will not come to them unless they understand why they should, that is unless they accept the world view summarised above and therefore see that it is necessary to do these things if we are to save the planet. Just establishing more community gardens and recycling centres does little or nothing to increase that understanding.

Needed — a new economy, local self-government and big-picture thinking

Secondly, the most crucial institutions for transition are not in the list above. They are not being set up and will not be set up by the thinking motivating the many good, green people now establishing the gardens and recycling centres.

If the global vision sketched above is valid then we ordinary people in our towns and suburbs eventually have to establish our own local Economy B, take control of it and relegate the market to a very minor role, identify local needs and work out how to meet them, get rid of unemployment, work out how to cut town imports, etc, and grope towards the practices which enable us to collectively self-govern the town. In other words we have to deliberately come together to replace core consumer-capitalist ways in our town.

This requires thinking about goals that are at an utterly different level to just initiating some good, green practices within present society. It requires coming together to organise collective economic systems and political action. The town must ask itself: what are we going to get together to do to solve our problems? what arrangements and institutions do we need to set up to make sure everyone around here is provided for? Such big-picture thinking is rarely encountered in current green or transition movements.

A reformist, not a revolutionary movement

Not surprisingly, at present the Transition Towns movement is reformist. It is:

  • generally unmotivated by the clear and explicit goal of replacing the core institutions of consumer-capitalist society; its implicit rationale is that it is sufficient to create more community gardens, recycling centres, skill banks, cycle paths, seed sharing, poultry coops, etc
  • not in general motivated by the clear and explicit goal of replacing the core institutions of consumer-capitalist society.

Some people within the movement say or think they are working for change from consumer-capitalist society, but my point is that, in fact, the things they are doing will not have that effect and will only bring about changes within it.

Thus, this rational assumes that it is in order to do anything green. Just go ahead and set up a community garden here, a nut tree plantation there, and in time it will all add towards the eventual achievement of a satisfactory society.

As Steffan has said: “…just go ahead and do something, anything… All over the world, groups of people with graduate degrees, affluence, decades of work experience, varieties of advanced training and technological capacities beyond the imagining of our great-grandparents are coming together, looking into the face of apocalypse… and deciding to start a seed exchange or a kids clothing swap.”

However, if your goal is to build the kind of society that I’ve argued we must have if we are to solve global problems of sustainability and justice, you would very definitely not think it was sufficient or appropriate just to encourage a thousand flowers to bloom; you would think very carefully about what projects were most important to achieve that goal; you would realise that this must involve taking collective control over the local economy; you would recognise that developing this vision among people in the region is the supremely important task to work on.

From the perspective I’ve outlined, making your town more resilient is far from a sufficient goal. That could be little more than building a haven of safety in a world of oil scarcity, a haven within a wider society that remains obsessed with growth, markets, exploiting the Third World and using mobile phones made with tantalum from the Congo.

If you want to protest that you are not just building a haven, that you see yourself as working for the kind of society that would defuse world problems, then, again, my point is that you won’t achieve that unless your vision and goals shift way beyond building compost heaps and recycling groups.

A lack of guidance

A major deficiency in the current Transition Towns movement literature is the lack of information on what to do.

The website, the Handbook (and pdf format here) and especially the 12 Steps document are valuable, but they are predominantly about the procedure for organising the movement. It is remarkably difficult to find clear guidance as to what the sub-goals of the movement are, the actual structures and systems and projects that we should be trying to undertake if our town is to achieve transition or resilience.

What we desperately need to know is what things should we start trying to set up, what should we avoid, what should come first. Especially important is that we need to be able to see the causal links, to understand why setting up this venture will have the effect of creating greater town resilience. Unfortunately, people coming to the movement eager to get started will find almost no guidance in the current literature as to what to actually try to do, let alone anything like a suggested plan of action with steps and do’s and dont’s and clear explanation of why specific projects will have desirable effects.

The advice and suggestions you do find in the literature are almost entirely about how to establish the movement (eg. awareness raising, form subgroups, build a bridge to local government), as distinct from how to establish things that will actually, obviously make the town more resilient. There is some reference to possibilities, such as community supported agriculture schemes, but we are told little more than that we should establish committees to look into what might be done in areas such as energy, food, education and health.

The lack is most evident in The Kinsale Energy Descent Plan, which does little more than repeat the process ideas in the 12 Steps documents and contains virtually no information or projects to do with energy technology or strategies. It lists some possibilities, such as exploring insulation and the possibility of local energy generation, and reducing the need for transport, but again there is no advice as to what precisely can or might be set up. We need more than this. We need to know how and why a particular project will make the town more resilient and we need to know what projects we should start with, what the difficulties and costs might be, etc. Just being told ‘create an energy descent plan’ (Step 12) doesn’t help much when what we need to know how might we do that.

The authors of these documents seem to be anxious to avoid prescription and dogma, and it is likely that no one can give confident guidance at this early stage, but that does not mean that ideas regarding probably valuable projects should not be offered. Some groups have accumulated experience that now surely indicates more effective directions to take.

I worry that the many now rushing into Transition Towns initiatives all around the world will do all sorts of good things, which will not turn out to have made much difference to the crucial issues. At least one group has folded, apparently because of confusion over what to do. If people become disenchanted, the movement could fizzle and be set back seriously. As I see our situation, this movement is our only hope so it is extremely important that it is not allowed to falter.

This lack of guidance reflects the reformist nature of the movement, the (implicit) acceptance of the assumption that just adding this and that better practice to this society will eventually fix it sufficiently.

What, then, should the goals be?

My hope is to persuade transitioners to adopt a radical global vision which sees the attempt to reform of consumer-capitalist society as a fundamental mistake, and sees the Transition Towns movement as the way to build the kinds of societies that would eliminate the main global problems. Following are the implications I want to suggest for sub-goals.

The supreme goal should be building a new local economy, and running it.

I don’t think the focal concern of the movement should be energy and its coming scarcity. Yes, all that sets the scene and the imperative, but the solution is not primarily to do with energy. It is to do with developing town economic self-sufficiency.

The supreme need is for us to build a radically new economy within our town and then for us to run it to meet our needs. It is not oil that sets your greatest insecurity, it is the global economy. lt doesn’t need your town. It will relocate your jobs where profits are greatest. It can flip into recession overnight and dump you and billions of others into unemployment and poverty. It will only deliver to you whatever benefits trickle down from the ventures which maximise corporate profits. It loots the Third World to stock your supermarket shelves. It has condemned much of your town to idleness in the form of unemployment and wasted time and resources that could be devoted to meeting urgent needs there. ln the coming time of scarcity it will not look after you.You will only escape that fate if you build a radically new economy in your region and run it to provide for the people who live there.

All this flatly contradicts the conventional economy. We have to build a local economy, not a national or globalised economy, an economy designed to meet needs not to maximise profits, an economy under participatory social control and not driven by corporate profit, and guided by rational planning as distinct from leaving everything to the market. This is the antithesis of capitalism, markets, profit motivation and corporate control. Nothing could be more revolutionary.

If we don’t plunge into building such an economy we will probably not survive in the coming age of scarcity. The Transition Towns movement will come to nothing of great significance if it does not set itself to build such economies. Either your town will get control of its own affairs and organise local productive capacity to provide for you or it will remain within and dependent on the mainstream economy.

In other words, the goal here is to build Economy B, a new local economy enabling the people who live in the town to guarantee the provision of basic necessities by applying their labour, land and skills to local resources, all under our control. The old Economy A can then drop dead and we will still be able to provide for ourselves.

This kind of vision and goal is not evident in the Transition Towns literature and reports I have read. There is no concept of setting out to eventually run the town economy for the benefit of the people, via participatory means.

The need for coordination, priorities and planning: a Community Development Co-op

We must somehow set up mechanisms which enable us to work out and operate an overall/integrated plan.

It will not be ideal if we proclaim the importance of town self-sufficiency and then all run off as individuals to set up a bakery here and a garden there. It is important that there should be continual discussion about what the town needs to set up to achieve its goals, what should be done first, what is feasible, how we might proceed to get the first and the main things done, what are the most important ventures to set up, how our scarce resources should best be deployed (eg. what are the top priorities for the working bees to do, for our banks to fund?). Of course, individual initiatives are to be encouraged but much more important are likely to be bigger projects requiring whole-town effort. This does not imply a vast and detailed plan, nor indeed a confident one, but it is a plea for an attempt to think out goals, priorities and integration.

This means that from the early stages we should set up some kind of Community Development Cooperative (CDC), a process whereby we can come together often to discuss and think about the town plan and our progress towards having a coordinated and unified approach that will then help us decide on sub-goals and priorities, and especially on the purposes to which the early working bees will be put. Obviously, this would not need to be elaborate or prescriptive and would not mean people would be discouraged from pursuing ventures other than those endorsed by the CDC.

Following is an indication of the kind of projects that I think a CDC would try to take up, although not all at a once:

  • identify the unmet needs of the town and its unused productive capacities and bring them together
  • set up the many simple cooperatives enabling all the unemployed, homeless, bored, retired, people to get into the community gardens etc. that would enable them to start producing many of the basic things they need
  • can we set up co-ops to run a bakery, bike repair shop, home help service, insulating operation, clothes making and repairing operation?
  • especially important are the cooperatives to organise leisure resources, the concerts, picnics, dances, festivals
  • can we organise a market day?

One of the worst contradictions in the present economy is that it dumps many people into unemployment, boredom, homelessness, retirement, mental illness and depression — and in the US, watching 4+ hours of TV every day. These are huge productive capacities left idle and wasted. The CDC can pounce on these resources and harness them and enable dumped people to start producing to meet some of their own needs. To do this is to have begun to set up Economy B. We simply record contributions and these entitle people to proportionate shares of the output. (This is to have initiated our own new currency; see below.)

This mechanism puts us in a position to eventually get rid of unemployment, to make sure all who want work and incomes and livelihoods can have them (not necessarily in normal, waged jobs). It is absurd and annoying that governments (and the people in your neighbourhood) tolerate people suffering depression and boredom when we could so easily set up the cooperatives that would enable them to produce things they need and enjoy purpose and solidarity.

Other roles for the CDC:

  • help existing small firms to move to activities the town needs, setting up little firms and farms and markets; establish a town bank to finance these ventures, making sure no one goes bankrupt and no one is left without a livelihood
  • organise business incubators
  • voluntary panels of experts and advisers on gardening, small business, arts etc so that we can get new ventures up and running well
  • organise the working bees to plant and maintain the community orchards and other commons, build the premises for the bee keeper and organise the committees to run the concerts and look after old people
  • research what the town is importing, and the scope is for local firms or new co-ops to start substituting local products
  • decide what things will emphatically not be left for market forces to determine, such as unemployment, what firms we will have, whether fast food outlets will be patronised if they set up
  • work towards the procedures for making good town decisions about these developments—the referenda, consensus processes, town meetings.

We will not let market forces deprive anyone of a livelihood. If we have too many bakeries we will work out how to redirect one of them. The town gets together to decide what it needs and to establish these things regardless of what market forces and the profit motive would have done.

Stress the importance of reducing consumption, living more simply, making, growing, repairing old things. The less we consume in the town the less we must produce or import. Remember, the world can’t consume at anything like the rate rich countries average.

As well as explaining the importance of reducing consumption, the CDC must stress alternative satisfactions and develop these (eg. the concerts, festivals, crafts). It can also develop recipes for cheap but nutritious meals, teaching craft and gardening skills, preserving etc. The household economy should be upheld as the centre of our lives and the main source of life satisfaction, more important than career.

Throughout all these activities recognise that our primary concern is to raise consciousness regarding the nature, functioning and unacceptability of consumer-capitalist society and the existence of better ways.

A desire for something better

The Transition Towns movement is characterised by a remarkable level of enthusiasm and energy. This seems to reflect a long pent-up disenchantment with consumer-capitalist society and a desire for something better.

There is a powerful case that the only way out of the alarming global predicament we are in has to be via a Transition Towns movement of some kind. To our great good fortune one has burst on the scene, but I worry that it could very easily fail to make a significant difference.

My argument has been that it will fail if it turns out to have been merely a reformist project because reforms can’t solve the problems. It is very important that people working for the movement should think carefully about what the global situation is and how it can be solved.

I have sketched a perspective on these questions which indicates that the movement is not going to make a significant contribution to the transition to a sustainable and just world unless the underlying vision and goals alter significantly.

Appendix

The introduction of local currencies

Although the introduction of our own local currency is very important there is much confusion about them and proposed schemes would often not have desirable effects. There is a tendency to proceed as if just creating a local currency would do wonders without any thinking through of how it is supposed to work.

lt will not have desirable effects unless it is carefully designed to do so. I have serious concerns about the currency schemes being adopted by the Transition Towns movement and I do not think the initiatives I am aware of are going to make significant contributions to the achievement of town resilience. It is not evident that they are based on a rationale that makes sense and enables one to see why they will have desirable effects.

It is most important that we are able to see precisely what general effect the form of currency we have opted for is going to have. We must be able to explain why we are implementing it in view of the beneficial effects it is designed to have. As I see it, the main purpose in introducing a currency is to contribute to getting the unused productive capacity of the town into action, ie. stimulating/enabling increase in output to meet needs. Another purpose is to avoid the interest charges when normal money is borrowed, but this can’t be done unless the new money is to be used to pay for inputs available in the town. It can’t pay for imported cement, for instance.

Following is the strategy that I think is most valuable. Consider again what happens in the above scenario when our CDC sets up a community garden and invites people to come and work in it. When time contributions are recorded with the intention of sharing produce later, in proportion to contributions, these slips of paper function like an IOU or ‘promissory note’ although that’s not what they are. They can be used to ‘buy’ garden produce when it becomes available. They are a form of money which enables everyone to keep track of how much work, producing and providing they have done and how great a claim they have on what’s been produced.

The extremely important point about the design and use of this currency is that it helps in getting those idle people into producing to meet some of their own needs. Obviously, the introduction of the currency is not the most important element in the process. Organising the ‘firm’ was the key factor.

Also obvious is the way the currency works. You can see what its desirable effects are. Just introducing a currency of some kind does not necessarily have any desirable effect. It is crucial to do it in a way that you know will have definite and valuable effects.

At a later stage we can use our currency to start trading with firms in the old economy. We can find restaurants, for instance, willing to sell us meals which we can pay for with our money. They will accept payment in our money if they can then spend that money buying vegetables and labour from us in Economy B. But note that the normal shops in the town cannot accept our money and we in Economy B cannot buy from them unless there is something we can sell to them. They can’t sell things to us, accepting our money, unless they can use that money. Nothing significant can be achieved unless people acquire the capacity to produce and sell things that others want. So the crucial task here for the Community Development Co-op is to look for things we in Economy B might sell to the normal firms in the town.

Councils can facilitate this process, for example by accepting our new money in part payment of their rates, but, again, only if there is something they can spend the money on. That is, goods and services they need that we in Economy B can provide. Therefore, the CDC must look for these possibilities.

Sometimes it makes sense for a council to issue a currency to enable use of local resources, especially labour, to build an infrastructure without having to borrow and pay interest to external banks.

This can only be done for those inputs that are available locally. If, for instance, the cement for the swimming pool has to be imported then it will have to be paid for in national currency, but it would be a mistake to borrow normal money to pay the workers if they are available in the town. They can be paid in specially printed new money with which they are able to pay (part of) their rates. Note, however, that the council then has the problem of what to do with these payments. If it burns them the council has actually paid for the pool via reduced normal money rate income and will have to reduce services to the town accordingly. Better to keep the money perpetually in use within a new Economy B so those workers and the council can go on providing things to each other.

Now, consider some ways of introducing a new currency that will not have desirable effects.

What would happen if the council or a charity just gave a lot of new money to poor people and got some shops to agree to accept it as payment for goods they sell? The recipients would soon spend it and be without jobs, and poor again. The shops would hold lots of new money but not be able to spend it buying anything they need. They could use it to buy from each other but would have no need to do this because they were already able to buy the few things they needed from each other using normal money. Again, if things are not to gum up it must be possible for the shopkeepers in the old economy to use their new money purchasing something from those poor people, and that’s not possible unless they can produce things within a new Economy B.

Sometimes the arrangement is for people to buy new notes using normal money. This is just substituting and achieves nothing for the town economy. What’s the point of people who would have used dollars now using ‘ecos’ they have bought? Again, there is no effect of bringing unused productive capacity into action.

What about the argument that local currencies encourage local purchasing because they can’t be spent outside the town? This reveals confusion.

Anyone who understands the importance of buying local will do so as much as they can regardless of what currency they have. Anyone who doesn’t will buy what’s cheapest, which is typically an imported item. Obviously what matters here is getting people to understand why it’s important to buy local. Just issuing a local currency will make no significant difference.

Similarly, currencies which depreciate with time miss the point and are unnecessary. Anyone who understands the situation does not need to be penalised for holding new money and not spending it. In any case it’s wrong-headed to set out to encourage spending. People should buy as little as they can, and any economy in which you feel an obligation to spend to make work for someone else is not an acceptable economy. In a sensible economy there is only enough work, producing and spending and use of money as is necessary to ensure all have sufficient for a good quality of life.

NEXT: The Trainer Papers 2— Russ Grayson responds

The Trainer Papers — a four part series

The Trainer Papers 1
The Trainer Papers 2
The Trainer Papers 3
The Trainer Papers 4

More from Ted Trainer

Simpler Way podcast

Ted Trainer has recorded a podcast about his Simpler Way concept. Find it just down from the top of the list of Michael’s podcasts, which the following link goes to. 53 minutes. Critical feedback welcome.

Books by Ted Trainer…

  • The Conserver Society: Alternatives for Sustainability. 1995, Ted Trainer; Zed Books, UK. ISBN 1856492753.
  • Towards a Sustainable Economy: The Need for Fundamental Change. 1995, Ted Trainer; Carpenter Publishing. ISBN 1897766149. A critique of economics as it exists and the story of how it could be in setting up regenerative local economies.
  • Renewable Energy Cannot Sustain a Consumer Society. 2007, Ted Trainer; Springer. ISBN 140205548X. A challenge to the assumption that simply switching from fossil fuels to renewable energy can sustain our consumer society.
  • The Simpler Way: Collected Writings of Ted Trainer. 2020, Ted Trainer; Simplicity Institute. ISBN 0994282877. An anthology contains some of Trainer’s most insightful essays about sustainable society, a new economy and local self-management while living within ecological limits.

Books mentioned in the text…

The Limits to Growth. 1972, Donnella H Meadows, Dennis L Meadows, Jorgen Randers, William W Behrens 111; Signet. ISBN 0451057678

Permaculture the social movement—a look inside…

A little permaculture history

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Russ Grayson
PERMACULTURE journal

I'm an independent online and photojournalist living on the Tasmanian coast .