F E A T U R E 
------------------   
from 
T H E   J O B S   L E T T E R   1 1 1   
published in New Zealand 5 November 1999   


TIME AS CURRENCY AND HEALER
--------------------------------------

British author DAVID BOYLE argues that volunteer 
schemes and alternative currencies can bring social 
cohesion to the poor. He believes that time-dollar 
schemes could soon be playing a significant role in 
national and local community development programmes. 

In Britain, the first major time-dollar scheme has already 
been launched by the charity Fair Shares.  Other schemes 
by the New Economics Foundation will follow later this 
year in Newcastle and London. 

*     Even before scientists discovered distant and 
mysterious planets such as Neptune and Pluto, they knew 
they were there because something seemed to be 
bending the orbit of the planets around them. It's the 
same with that much-discussed but irritatingly elusive 
earthbound quality known as "social capital". It may be 
impossible to define or to bottle - but it still seems to have 
an effect. 

The American journal Science recently carried the results 
of an exhaustive study of 343 different neighbourhoods in 
Chicago. Researchers from Harvard University's School 
of Public Health interviewed nearly 9,000 people about 
local violence and found that it seemed to be unrelated to 
the usual measures of deprivation. Equally poor districts 
had very different levels of violence. 

What made the difference? The researchers defined it as 
"informal social control and cohesion and trust". The least 
violent neighbourhoods were places where local people 
were prepared to "intervene for the common good". 

Call it "community", like Amitai Etzioni, "duty", like David 
Selbourne, "trust", like Francis Fukuyama or "social 
capital", like Robert Putnam - who discovered it wandering 
around the medieval towns of Italy - but it is the quality 
described by Tony Blair as the "magical ingredient" that 
decides between social breakdown and cohesion. 

*     How do we recreate this local trust that the Harvard 
researchers found? Social capital is not just difficult to 
define, it also seems impossible to create. Yet there is 
one emerging idea that could fit the bill and has won 
praise from the inventor of the Third Way concept himself, 
Anthony Giddens, the director of the London School of 
Economics. This is a technique that boosts civic 
involvement by using people's time as a kind of money - 
borrowing as much from the idea of Air Miles and 
supermarket loyalty points as it does from old-fashioned 
volunteering. 

There are now more than 200 projects using the idea 
across the USA and Japan. Giddens explains: 
"Volunteers who take part in charitable work are 'paid' in 
time donated by other volunteer workers. A computer 
system registers every 'time dollar' earned and spent and 
provides participants with regular accounts. Time dollars 
are tax-free and can be accumulated to pay for health care 
as well as other health services." 

It sounds too simple. Yet time dollars are more radical 
than they seem at first sight, particularly when, in addition 
to health, they can be spent on a wide range of items, 
from food and clothing to computers and literacy training. 

*     Building a local economy in time is also egalitarian, 
since everyone gets paid the same - an hour is worth an 
hour whether you are a wealthy lawyer, an elderly 
housebound woman making supportive phone calls to 
neighbours or a disaffected 16 year old tutoring 14 year 
olds after school. And the relationship of donor and 
recipient gets turned upside down. It sounds like 
volunteering, but its reciprocal nature makes it in some 
ways the opposite: people who were once labelled 
"recipients" or "clients" become participants. They are no 
longer receiving charity; they are taking part. 

*     Making people feel useful - when the whole resources 
of government used to be dedicated to making them feel 
like a burden - has also proved to be transformational. 
Problem people turn out to be assets after all. 

"This new money can enlist the people the market had 
already discarded or rejected," says one driving force 
behind time-dollar schemes, the US civil rights lawyer 
Edgar Cahn. "It puts them to work on problems generated 
by the very economy that had thrown them away. Creating 
a new form of money that could do this was driven by a 
simple moral imperative: no more throwaway people." 

*     The first time-dollar projects were launched in six 
cities in 1987 amid widespread publicity, and many health 
centres and hospitals now have their own schemes 
attached. Research shows that about a third of the people 
taking part in time dollars have never volunteered for 
anything before. They also tend to stay volunteering 
longer than average volunteer schemes, many of which 
have a serious "burn-out" problem. 

The first projects - in Brooklyn, Dorchester in 
Massachusetts, Jefferson City, Miami, St Louis and San 
Francisco - proved within a year or so that they were 
effecting real budget savings. Services were being 
provided that allowed older people to stay in their own 
homes, and taking part in the programme as volunteers 
and recipients - or both - was giving people human contact 
and a sense of purpose, which also kept them healthier. 

Time-money is an explicit attempt to reward altruism. 
"Market economics values what is scarce - not the real 
work of society, which is caring, loving, being a citizen, a 
neighbour and a human being," says Cahn. "That work will, 
I hope, never be so scarce that the market value goes 
high, so we have to find a way of rewarding contributions 
to it." 

*     The idea can be developed in other areas apart from 
health - anywhere, in fact, where we need to transform 
neighbourhoods or set up a new kind of relationship 
between institutions and clients. 

The notorious Benning Terrace housing complex in 
Washington DC is a prime example. Here residents earn 
time dollars for volunteer work, which has transformed the 
estate, and they use these to buy four tons of food per 
month at the local food bank. 

*     Perhaps the most impressive story comes from the 
Washington law firm Holland & Knight, which won the 
1997 American Bar Association award for its time-dollar 
project, organised under the company's pro bono 
programme. 

It could have done the work for the community group for 
nothing, of course. But it was a big job, which meant 
closing crack houses in the Shaw neighbourhood, 
unfreezing the grant money allocated for refurbishing a 
local playground, cleaning up local police corruption and 
keeping the neighbourhood school open - and Holland & 
Knight needed local involvement for it to work. So it 
charged the community a retainer in time-money. 

By the end, the firm had billed the equivalent of $230,000 
in time dollars. This was paid off by the local community 
by helping with the clean-up, providing a night escort 
service for old people, campaigning for better street 
lighting, taking down the car numbers of drug dealers, 
school tutoring and much else besides. 

Lawyers were motivated to organise this innovative 
scheme because they knew that every hour they put in 
would generate another hour of self-help in the 
community. And all the activity from this reciprocal 
relationship made Shaw a better place to live. 

*     As Cahn develops the idea to bring in young people 
and encourage training - in the time economy people earn 
by doing training - the systems look for wasted resources 
that can be made available for time earnings. And 
increasingly the wasted asset underpinning the time-dollar 
economy is old computers, about 15 million of which are 
put into landfill every year in the USA - with many more 
pending, thanks to the millennium bug. 

So in 17 Chicago problem schools, pupils have been 
earning time dollars by taking part in a peer-tutoring 
programme, earning the 100 or so time dollars necessary 
to buy their own refurbished computer. Their parents also 
have to chip in four time dollars for their children to make 
the purchase. 

The schools found that attendance went up when the 
tutoring was happening. Less predictable was the big 
reduction in bullying, because it was considered bad form 
to bully a person you were tutoring - or to let anybody else 
do so either. 

"We will never know the positive impact of this 
programme on these young people," the director of the 
project, Calvin Pearce, told the Chicago Tribune. "Most of 
the families involved in this programme would never have 
been able to afford a computer." 

*     Cahn himself has taken over part of the youth court 
from the District of Columbia, which - like the Chicago 
public school system - has been groaning under a surfeit 
of violence and a shortage of money and ideas. Now, 
defendants are tried for minor offences by other 
teenagers, who are paid for their participation in time 
dollars - also used for buying refurbished computers. 

*     A similar idea has been tried, much more 
controversially, in Baltimore public housing. Families in 
this system pay up to eight hours a month in time-money 
in addition to paying rent. This is a difficult idea - 
especially if the hours worked are perceived as providing 
replacements for services that the landlords should be 
providing anyway. 

Cahn believes it is defensible provided the participants of 
the system are in charge, rather than making landlords 
responsible for enforcing the time debt. He also points out 
that this kind of scheme can tackle depression and 
isolation and revitalise an estate. 

*     Anthony Giddens praises the idea of time dollars in 
the context of "building civil society" and as part of a 
growing alternative to mainstream work. Time-money is a 
helpful way of redefining work, going beyond conventional 
paid jobs and including in its definition anything that 
communities need doing in order to thrive. 

That includes all those tasks that get downgraded by a 
society impoverished by market economics, such as 
parenting, caring or tending local parks. Ironically, these 
are tasks that prop up the money economy. 

*     According to one British study, volunteering is already 
putting �41 billion a year into the social economy in the 
UK, levered by public support worth �300 million. That's 
�40 of volunteer effort for every �1 spent by government. 
Encouraging the time-money idea could have a major 
economic impact. 

First, it is affordable. Time-money can radically cut the 
cost of programmes for the socially excluded, enabling 
public bodies to offer services that only the better-off 
could pay for in cash. For example, because involvement 
with time-dollar programmes keeps people healthy, a 
Brooklyn health insurance company, Elderplan, found it 
was able to accept time-money for 25 per cent of its 
insurance charges. That is also how the US housing 
charity Habitat is able to reduce the price of homes for 
people on low incomes. They require people to give 500 
hours' help in building homes as part of the price. This 
could equally be applied to rents. 

It could have a significant impact on education, too, in 
particular on the student loans system. People on low 
incomes could repay loans partly in time. In the US, 
AmeriCorps now has an education grants programme that 
allows students to pay tuition fees or student loan 
payments in this way. Berea College in Kentucky, for 
example, has always required students to pay part of their 
fees in community service. 

*     One of the difficulties of the US Workfare scheme has 
been the lack of transport and social facilities such as 
childcare provision in the worst unemployment black 
spots, making it even harder to wean people from welfare 
to work. The extended families of days gone by are no 
longer there. How can single mothers commute to work 
without child-minders or buses? Where they find a way, all 
the informal work that unemployed people have done for 
each other is left undone. A scheme currently under 
discussion for the Marshall Heights neighbourhood of 
Washington proposes that some of this vital community 
work - care for the elderly, child-minding and so on - 
should earn time-money, which in turn can be exchanged 
for benefits. 

There is an echo of this in the government's new concept 
of citizenship pensions, floated in the green paper on 
welfare reform, which proposes giving carers pension 
credits to make up for the National Insurance they never 
paid because they were looking after elderly relatives. 

*     If people are prepared to make a contribution to 
society in this way - earning time-money because there 
are no paid jobs - then even the most enthusiastic 
devotee of the work ethic would probably accept that they 
deserve the basic necessities of life. 

Source - The New Statesman Essay  "Time is a great 
social healer" by David Boyle 23rd August 1999 
www.newstatesman.co.uk. David Boyle is a Senior 
Associate at the New Economics Foundation and also the 
author of "Funny Money: in search of alternative cash" 
(HarperCollins). 

David Boyle homepage is 
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/dcboyle/

"Funny Money: In search of alternative cash" by David 
Boyle, (January 1999) HarperCollins Publishers

Amazon/The Jobs Letter link : 
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0002559471/thejobsresearctr

also 

"Alternative Currencies, Alternative Identities" by David 
Boyle (March 1999)  Centre for Reform

Amazon/The Jobs Letter link : 
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1902622030/thejobsresearctr


C R E D I T S   
-------------------   
edited by Vivian Hutchinson for the Jobs Research Trust   
P.O.Box 428, New Plymouth, New Zealand   
phone 06-753-4434 fax 06-759-4648   
Internet address --  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   
   
The Jobs Letter -- an essential information and media 
watch on jobs, employment,  unemployment, the future of work,  
and related economic and education issues.  

The Jobs Research Trust -- a not-for-profit Charitable 
Trust  constituted in 1994 to develop and  distribute information 
that  will help our communities create more jobs and reduce 
unemployment  and poverty in New Zealand.    
   
Our internet website at 

          http://www.jobsletter.org.nz/

contains our back issues and key papers, 
and hotlinks to other internet resources.

ends   
------

Reply via email to