This came up on another forum where one of the folks has a thing for expiring currency as a method of dealing with wealth accumulation (which is bad for some reason).
So I read the link and immediately dismissed it because everyone's time isn't equal but also wondered how the currency is created in the first place?
Do you work for an hour to get a buck or do you just write a promissory note to someone who has worked for you stating that you will work for them for an hour some time in the future and this becomes currency?
Seems like the people who issue this currency could get a whole bunch of free labor and not have to work at all to back the notes they are printing just like fractional reserve banks produce money out of thin air in the current system.
Or I guess they could be individualized so they are the equivalent to a coupon for a specific service but then you would run into the double coincidence of wants problem.
Probably should read the OP's link, maybe it answers this...
Nitroadict:If that's how "time-hours" can operate, that might be why I originally thought it was an interesting, as voluntary contracts would be copasetic with Agora activity, methinks. I also think this would more effective at a local and/or community level.
Why not just trade your labor for a real commodity instead of a piece of paper with questionable backing?