NGO Another Way (Stichting Bakens Verzet), 1018 AM Amsterdam, Netherlands.

 

SELF-FINANCING, ECOLOGICAL, SUSTAINABLE, LOCAL INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS FOR THE WORLD’S POOR.

 

 

Homepage

Projects, examples

WRITE AN INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PROJECT

FREE E-COURSE FOR DIPLOMA IN INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT

Articles and resources 

  About Us  

Downloads  (updated 03 October 2011)

More on development issues

Some useful technologies

   Contact us

 

 

Edition 179: 25 January, 2012

 

( FRANÇAIS)

 

HOW THE WORLD’S POOR CAN IMPROVE THEIR QUALITY OF LIFE AND MEET THE MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS.

PRACTICAL MONETARY REFORM.

 

(Stichting Bakens Verzet has endorsed the Earth Charter.)

 

A MODEL FOR DEVELOPMENT WITH CREATIVE PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS TO POVERTY REDUCTION.

       

The Model for self-financing, ecological, sustainable, local integrated development projects presented at this website provides simple, down-to-earth practical solutions to poverty- and development-related problems. It sets out step by step how the solutions are put into effect. By following the steps, users can draft their own advanced ecological sustainable local integrated development projects and apply for their seed financing. Social, financial, productive and service structures are set up in a critical order of sequence and carefully integrated with each other. That way, cooperative, interest-free, inflation-free local economic environments are formed in project areas.  Local initiative and true competition are then free to flourish there.

 

The Model itself is a project index. Each item in the index is linked to a sample file. The Model is in the public domain and can be used by all free of charge.

 

Click here for a 32-slide Powerpoint presentation of a typical  integrated development project.

Click here for a very simple summary of a typical integrated development project.

Click here to see an  executive summary which provides a short analysis of a typical integrated development project.

Click here to see the Model itself, a standard project index. 

Click here to see a full-year e-learning course at post-masters level for the Diploma in Integrated Development ( Dip. Int. Dev.)  The course is available on-line for use by all. Anyone interested can follow the full course free of charge. The Diploma in Integrated Development ( Dip. Int. Dev.) itself is awarded only to students following the course with tutor support, against payment for tutorship on a costs-recovery basis. Diploma graduates qualify to lead integrated development projects and to train others. Just reading the course material provides full information on the concepts and methods the Model is based on. 

Click here to see a new section of the course on how to finance integrated development projects using the CDM mechanisms (Kyoto Protocol)

 

 

THERE’S A SPECIAL MENU FOR YOU IF YOU ARE:

 

A development aid ministry

An international or national development organisation, donor, or micro-credit institution.

Another non-governmental organisation involved in development, poverty reduction, drinking water, sanitation and hygiene education projects.

A university, research institute or student.

A development aid professional (the work specially benefits women! )

An individual who cares and wants to make a difference.

 

MORE ON SOME BASIC ISSUES COVERED BY THE MODEL FOR INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS.

 

Agriculture and food security in integrated development projects                                     Credit crises. Solutions offered by integrated development projects.                                                         

Ecology and conservation in integrated development projects.                                          Education in integrated development projects.                

Fight against corruption in integrated development projects.                                             Financing integrated development projects using the CDM mechanism.               

Gender and women's rights in integrated development projects.                                        Health aspects and integrated development projects.                                

Millennium Development Goals. How integrated development projects solve them.      Millennium goals. How integrated development projects achieve them. Powerpoint presentation : 36 slides.

Policy implications of integrated development projects.                                                       Poverty, its causes, what is needed to eliminate it. Powerpoint  presentation :  24 slides.

Project architecture for integrated development. Powerpoint presentation : 14 slides.    Project structures for integrated development. Powerpoint presentation : 43 slides.

Water and sanitation in integrated development projects.

 

MONETARY REFORM: HOW OUR FINANCIAL SYSTEM ACTUALLY WORKS AND HOW TO CORRECT IT.

 

The world's debt problem is that too many people have been getting something for nothing for too long. Unearned income in the form of  interest paid on bank deposits doesn’t produce anything. The  additional debt needed to support that unearned income must be serviced by the productive economy but can never be repaid. Both the unearned income and the debt needed to support it increase exponentially.

Some nations have also been living beyond their means in their dealings with others, creating current account deficits that accumulate over time. Those deficits add more to the debt the debtor nations must service and to the amount of unearned income the productive economy must pay local and foreign deposit holders. They also lead to foreign ownership of debtor economies and greater exchange rate instability.

In some countries the total debt is now so large that the unearned income being paid for doing nothing exceeds the growth of the productive economy. Income earners cannot pay all the unearned income that deposit holders expect without reducing their own disposable incomes. Total economic output then shrinks, causing worldwide economic collapse.

The solutions are to remove deposit interest from the financial system and to repay the banks' foreign debt.

To remove deposit interest from the money supply, publicly issued interest-free money will need to replace private interest-bearing bank debt, and the amount of money in circulation will need to be carefully
managed. Normal banking operations and bank profits will not be affected by the change because inflation will be kept close to zero and the financial system will become almost risk-free.

Foreign debt can be repaid by introducing a tax-neutral Foreign Exchange Surcharge to raise the cost of foreign transactions in debtor countries so their current accounts become positive.

Removing deposit interest on bank deposits means that local interest rates will fall to low levels. Local borrowers will not be paying enough interest on their loans to enable the banks to service their foreign debt. To fix the shortfall during the transition period, the agency in charge of the public money supply will manage and fund the banks' foreign interest costs until their foreign debt has been repaid.

General summary of all papers published. (Revised edition).

NEW : The missing links between growth, saving, deposits and GDP.

The DNA of the debt-based economy.

The Savings Myth. (Revised edition)

The interest-bearing debt system and its economic impacts. (Revised edition).

Manifesto of 95 principles of the debt-based economy.

Unified text of the manifesto of the debt-based economy.

How to create stable financial systems in four complementary steps. (Revised edition).

How to introduce an e-money financed virtual minimum wage system in New Zealand. (Revised edition).

How to introduce a guaranteed minimum income in New Zealand. (Revised edition).

Financial system mechanics explained for the first time. “The Ripple Starts Here.” (Original version, not updated. This is now for historical reference only. Other papers incorporate up-dates and revisions. )

Short summary of the paper The Ripple Starts Here. (Original version, not updated. This is now for historical reference only. Other papers incorporate up-dates and revisions.) 

                        Financial system mechanics: Power-point presentation.  (Original version, not updated. This is now for historical reference only. Other papers incorporating up-dates and revisions.)

See also : Vitali S. et al, The network of global corporate control. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Zurich, October, 2011.

 

NATIONAL AND REGIONAL INTEGRATED DEVELOPMENT PLANS COST A FEW EUROCENTS PER PERSON.

 

The Model makes the drafting of fully detailed national or regional integrated development plans to meet nearly all of  the Millennium goals quick, easy, and cheap. How quickly the plans are prepared depends on the number of people (usually students or active members of grass-roots NGOs) and the number of individual projects (about 20 for each million inhabitants) involved. The maximum period for plan preparation is about three months, the minimum period one month. Plans involving populations over 10.000.000 cost about 2.5 eurocents ( €  0.025) per person. Smaller plans involving up to 1.000.000 inhabitants may cost up to 15 eurocents  ( €  0.15) per person, depending on population spread  and the size of the project areas.

National and regional plans involve the drafting of individual project documentations under the Model for each area with about 50.000 inhabitants in the country or region. Their preparation has practical advantages. Authors of the individual project documentations receive direct personal hands-on training on the application of the principles behind the Model, so that they qualify to act as coordinators for the projects they have drafted. Another advantage is that the financiers of the plans, the costs of which vary from about    100.000 to    300.000 depending on the populations, get to know the local grass-roots NGOs involved. Successful preparation of the national or regional plan should make it easier for the same financiers to contribute to the cost of pilot projects in the poorest areas covered by the plan.

 

CONVERSION OF TRADITIONAL PROJECT STRUCTURES INTO FULLY SUSTAINABLE  ONES. 

 

Many existing development projects have already failed or risk failure because they are not fully sustainable over a longer term. This is often due to the lack of an appropriate framework of enabling social, financial, and productive structures fully covering on-going management and maintenance costs and long-term replacements of capital goods. 

The social, financial, productive and service structures foreseen in section 5 of the Model can be built around structures set up under traditional projects to create cooperative, interest-free, inflation-free local economic environments in the project areas. This way several thousand work opportunities can be created in each project area and large amounts of on-going formal money costs saved.  On-going financial leakage from project areas, typical of traditional development projects, is blocked. The small amount of formal money reaching the project areas is retained and continually recycled there.

 

WEBSITE DESIGN. 

 

This website has been designed especially to help professionals working under difficult conditions in developing countries. Communications there are often expensive, and telephone lines and computer equipment for internet connections slow. Web-pages with pop-ups and audio-visual or moving images consume extra, costly, energy. Website texts are therefore presented here in HTM language on a plain background. First-line files are always simple text files, to speed up navigation within the website. Photographs, drawings, illustrations, charts and graphs can be viewed "on demand". 


Search engines rank this website as a leading resource on a wide range of development-related issues.

View rankings here using your preferred search engine.


"Money is not the key that opens the gates of the market but the bolt that bars them."

Gesell, Silvio, The Natural Economic Order, revised English edition, Peter Owen, London 1958, page 228.

 

 “Poverty is created scarcity.”

Wahu Kaara, point 8 of the Global Call to Action Against Poverty, 58th annual NGO Conference, United Nations, New York 7 September 2005.

 

“You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.”

William Jennings Bryan, Official Proceedings of the Democratic National Convention Held in Chicago, Illinois, July 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, 1896, (Logansport, Indiana, 1896), pp.226–234.

 

“Where is the thicket? Gone. Where is the eagle? Gone. The end of living and the beginning of survival.”

Speech (as later reported) attributed to Si’ahl, ‘Chief Seattle’, Seattle, 1854.

 


Creative Commons License

 

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-commercial Share-Alike 3.0 Licence.