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Local Economic Solutions for Sustainability
Extending Localisation
Introduction
Manufacturing
and resources
Food
Retail
and local centres
Energy
Finance
Overarching
issues
Next
steps
LWM
Home
Localise West Midlands
The Warehouse
54-57 Allison Street
Digbeth
Birmingham
B5 5TH
Tel: 0121 685 1155
Fax: 0121 643 3122
Email: info@localisewestmidlands.org.uk
Registered in England and Wales as a company limited
by guarantee (not for profit) no: 6239211
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Extending Localisation
- an exploratory report
Finance
In addition to usual localisation issues within the finance sector is
the need for financial transactions to relate closely to the productive,
'real' economy - productive work and real assets.
Negative trends
- Bank mergers have created huge institutions large enough to create
havoc when they fail
- In the UK our central banking has no regional representation, brief
or accountability in its scrutiny or other roles, which makes it less
responsive to local conditions and basic banking principles and much
less publicly accountable .
- Many building societies have demutualised and become banks
- The UK taxation system is one of the most centralised in Europe, almost
entirely controlled by central government.
- PFI schemes put public services in the hands usually of transnational
companies, reducing local multiplier and accountability. The PFI approach
also makes shorter-term gains at the risk of longer-term public debt.
- Stock exchange funding for enterprise is volatile, so that otherwise
secure jobs can be lost due to a panic.
Positive trends,
good practice and opportunities
- Building societies are better for local multiplier effect and accountability
as they are mutually owned enterprises. They are less exposed on international
finance markets as 70% of its funds must come from members' deposits,
and so have been protected in the current crisis.
- Islamic finance: as well as anti-usury, follows the principle that
every financial transaction must involve an underlying asset or service
and if you trade an asset you have to own it first. The UK's only Sharia-law-compliant
Bank, the Islamic Bank of Britain, is based in Birmingham.
- Credit unions: 39 in the West Midlands. Localised financing structure,
co-operatively owned and controlled, offering financial services to
all (including the financially excluded), with responsible lending principles
and advice. Have had credit available during credit crunch. Offer current
accounts, benefits direct, ISAs, child trust funds and mortgages.
- Local authority bonds potential for investing in the public good;
more secure returns than many investments. A good route for local pension
funds.
- Birmingham's local stock exchange www.investbx.com - enables local
companies to connect to investor community for sums between £500K
and £1.5bn. One advantage stated on their website is that "local
investors can benefit because.. local knowledge can lower perception
of risk." But is it more stable than other stock exchange funding?
- Worker-owned business models including worker buyouts: no examples
of major companies in West Midlands but clear advantages in terms of
accountability, power, job satisfaction, stability, local multiplier.
www.employeeownership.co.uk. Community buyouts of local shops and pubs
also - see retail section.
- Aston Reinvestment Trust (Birmingham) and similar Community Development
Finance Institutions offer financing for local business, often with
social objectives. (Their website currently says "At ART there
is no crunch".)
- Community Alternative Currency schemes - around 33 in the West Midlands.
Services are exchanged for community credits which can be exchanged
with other members for other services. Whilst always secondary to mainstream
money, these can be genuinely useful, redistributive and more stable
in times of financial hardship - or for the less well off in an affluent
area.
Potential recommendations
- Encourage mutual models such as building societies and credit unions
- Ensure a greater degree of banking is centred on productive work and
real assets;
- Provide options for people's individual savings and mortgages that
are protected from the global finance casino.
- 'De-merge' the bigger banks
- Investigate local stock exchange and CDFIs as more stable finance
for enterprise
- Greater use of local government bonds as investment, perhaps for pension
funds.
- Mainstream finance should follow 'real asset' principle from Islamic
finance
- Follow EU Charter of Local Self-Government recommendations on tax
- Regional representation on our central bank; closer public interest
scrutiny of banking practices
- Investigate the further role of complementary currencies in the West
Midlands economies particularly in the light of the recession.
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