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Local Patriots

Hendrik Loven (ncy)February 10, 2007

While the rest of the world focuses on globalization, ever more Germans are embracing regionalism by paying for goods and services with local currencies. Munich is next in line as it prepares to accept the "regio."

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Local identity and regional patriotism are writ large in BavariaImage: AP

Germans appear to have a fondness for alternative currencies. It started with the "roland," which was first used in shops in Bremen six years ago. Outside of Munich, people can pay in "regios," which will become an accepted currency in Bavaria's capital in spring.

"When I buy a cow from a farmer here in the region, which I then process here in our company and sell to a customer who pays with regios, then I can, in turn, pay the farmer with regios, and he can, in turn, pay with regios in my shop," explained Josef Urban, an organic butcher in Eurasburg, near Munich, who accepts both euros and regios. "No money leaves the region," he added.

The regio is a reaction to the growing difficulties small farmers, butchers, bakers and organic stores have to compete with discount retailers. It is also an attempt to do something for their towns and villages. The participants employ a new method of payment to keep money and added value in the region.

Of course, the regio isn't legal tender, but rather a voucher that is traded against the euro at an exchange rate of one to one: 10 euros for 10 regios. Fans of local currencies say the advantage is that the vouchers are only valid in a limited area, among companies that produce or sell goods or services locally, so that they help to protect jobs.

Good for local business


Münchner Regio
Munich is supposed to get the regio in spring

Since the "roland" was launched in Bremen six years ago, around 20 more regional currencies have taken off in Germany. Another 30 are being planned, despite the fact that there's no tangible advantage for consumers.

"The advantage that a customer has is expressed through strengthening the region and strengthening the community, with the aspects of new positions for trainees, sustaining jobs in general, sustaining stores, etc," said Rolf Merten, who initiated the regio in the Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen region near Munich.

Merten said 15,000 regios were already in circulation, and around 60 businesses had agreed to accept them. Consumers can buy five, 10, and 20 regio notes at various locations in the area.

But one main difference to the euro is that people can't get their money's worth if they save regios. After a year, a 10-regio note is only worth nine euros, since every three months it loses 25 cents in value. To retain the currency's value, the holder must paste the current quarter's validity stamp to each note.

The idea is that regios will change hands more quickly if it's not viable to save the currency, and businesses and their employees will feel the positive effects of faster consumption.


Bigger and better

Plans for the regio go well beyond Munich. Organizers in southern Germany want three different local currencies to be exchangeable for one another.

It's a unique development when it comes to German regional currencies, according to Isabella Weiss, one of the Munich organizers. Weiss said three places in Bavaria with their own regios -- Munich, Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen and the Ostallgäu region -- were in the process of forming a currency network.


BdT Fohlenmarkt Kaltblutzüchter gehen am Freitag, 8. September 2006, mit Tieren, Heusack und Traenkeimer auf den tradtionellen Markt fuer Kaltblutfohlen in Rottenbuch im oberbayerischen Landkreis Weil
Local businesses are meant to profit from the regioImage: AP

"That means that the Munich resident, when he goes to Wolfratshausen (38 km or 24 miles from Munich) over the weekend, can see there where can I go drink a beer and pay with the regio?" Weiss said.

There's one big disadvantage to regional currencies. Financially weak families usually can't afford to use them, since they must then shop in local stores, which tend to be more expensive than nationwide discounters.

That's why critics, such as Gerhard Rösl, formerly an economist at Germany's central bank, describe local money systems as the utopian ideas of "social romantics."

Whether merely utopian dreams or effective aid to a region, the new local currencies demonstrate that ever more people want to redesign globalization. Around 300,000 euros ($388,000) are in circulation in Germany as regional currencies. With the 155 billion euros in circulation in Germany, it's really just a token in the country's immense purse.