Positive Money UK is a not-for-profit advocacy group based in London and Brussels.[2][3][4] Positive Money's mission is to promote various reforms of central banks and alternative monetary policy.[5] Its current executive director is geophysicist Fran Boait.[6]
Formation | 2010 |
---|---|
Type | Non-governmental organisation |
Legal status | Company limited by guarantee |
Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
Executive Director | Fran Boait[1] |
Chair of the Board | Sian Williams |
Key people | Ben Dyson (founder) |
Affiliations | Finance Watch |
Budget (2019) | 480,000 GBP |
Staff | 10 (2020) |
Website | www.positivemoney.org |
History
Positive Money was founded in London by Ben Dyson in 2010[7] as a response to the global financial crisis of 2007-2008. In its early years, Positive Money focused its efforts in advocating for a fundamental reform of the United Kingdom's monetary system.
In 2013, Fran Boait became executive director of Positive money. Under Boait's leadership, the organisation somehow broadened its scope and diversified its range of proposals, by including more pragmatic steps such as digital currency, and various forms of monetary financing proposals such as "People's QE" or "helicopter money", and "green quantitative easing". Positive Money also adopted new tactics such as rallies in front of the Bank of England[8] and petitioning. In 2013, Positive Money initiated the International Movement for Monetary Reform, a worldwide network of likeminded organisations.[9]
In 2015, Positive money started its international expansion by launching a Eurozone-wide campaign on "Quantitative Easing for the People".[10][11] Positive money registered as a lobby group in the EU institutions in Brussels[12] and in 2018 it formally created Positive Money Europe[13] to operate the group's campaigns towards the European Central Bank and the European Parliament. In December 2019, Positive Money Europe was able to meet with the ECB President Christine Lagarde[14] and its work has been praised by former ECB's chief economist Peter Praet.[15]
In 2016 Positive money founder Ben Dyson joined the Bank of England as a researcher, and he continued to work on Central Bank Digital Currency.[16][17]
Early 2021, Positive money won a major victory with the announcement that the Bank of England would be given the remit to green its corporate quantitative easing programme.[18]
Proposals
Sovereign money
Positive Money's historical backbone proposal is to introduce a "sovereign money system".[19][20] Under such a reform, private banks would be deprived from their ability to create money by extending credit into the economy. In turn, the Bank of England would regain the monopoly over money creation, by financing the government's budget (monetary financing) or distributing a citizens' dividend ("helicopter money").[21][22] The group however refutes any affiliation with Modern Monetary Theory.[23]
Formation | 2018 |
---|---|
Type | Non-governmental organisation |
Legal status | ASBL |
Headquarters | Brussels, Belgium |
Executive Director | Vicky Van Eyck |
Chair of the Board | Fran Boait |
Budget (2019) | 140,000 EUR |
Staff | 7 (2020) |
Website | www.positivemoney.eu |
Although Positive Money's proposal is similar to full-reserve banking or narrow banking, it differs in the sense that it would merge bank deposits and central bank money. As explained by former Positive Money researcher Frank van Lerven, "Under a Sovereign Money system, there is no longer a split circulation of money, just one integrated quantity of money circulating among banks and non-banks alike."[24] According to former ECB Vice-president Vitor Constancio, Positive Money's proposal "would not create enough funding for investment and growth."[25]
Other proposals
Over the years, Positive Money has broadened its agenda towards somewhat more short-term proposals such as:
- Fiscal-monetary cooperation: the organisation proposes various ways to channel money created by central banks towards public spending and investment.
- Reforming the governance and accountability frameworks of the Bank of England[26][27] and of the European Central Bank.[28]
- Greening monetary policy: Aligning monetary policy with climate change objectives[29][30][31][32] though reforms of central bank's collateral framework or forms of credit guidance such as green TLTROs.[33][34]
- Digital currency: the organisation propose implementing a central bank digital currency[35] in the UK and supports the introduction of a digital euro by the ECB.