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| ucos:use-credit_obligations [2026/03/10 12:44] – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ucos:use-credit_obligations [2026/04/20 19:43] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ||
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| - | # Use-credit obligations | + | This topic is part of [[gt: |
| + | ====== | ||
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| - | ## What are use-credit obligations? | + | ===== What are use-credit obligations? |
| A use-credit obligation (UCO) is essentially a voucher that will be accepted as payment for future supply of goods and services. They’re most useful as ways of funding [commons](/ | A use-credit obligation (UCO) is essentially a voucher that will be accepted as payment for future supply of goods and services. They’re most useful as ways of funding [commons](/ | ||
| - | ### How they work | + | ==== How they work ==== |
| Imagine a group of local people or a community energy scheme who want to build a wind turbine or install solar panels on roofs to provide the community with electricity, | Imagine a group of local people or a community energy scheme who want to build a wind turbine or install solar panels on roofs to provide the community with electricity, | ||
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| </ | </ | ||
| - | ### UCOs as savings | + | ==== UCOs as savings |
| If people believe that the price of electricity is going to rise, they will want to buy expensive future electricity at today’s prices. | If people believe that the price of electricity is going to rise, they will want to buy expensive future electricity at today’s prices. | ||
| This is why they’re such a good savings instrument – and particularly if you have a ‘basket’ of them. If you only have kWh UCOs, then when you retire, you’ll have to sell some to buy food and other necessities; | This is why they’re such a good savings instrument – and particularly if you have a ‘basket’ of them. If you only have kWh UCOs, then when you retire, you’ll have to sell some to buy food and other necessities; | ||
| - | ### History | + | ==== History |
| The basic idea isn’t new. Medieval ‘market money’ vouchers / tokens (see video) were in effect UCOs. | The basic idea isn’t new. Medieval ‘market money’ vouchers / tokens (see video) were in effect UCOs. | ||
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| </ | </ | ||
| </ | </ | ||
| - | ### Avoiding ' | + | ==== Avoiding ' |
| Another important Chris Cook invention was to make UCOs assignable, not transferable. To explain: a £10 note is transferable. Anyone who gets it can spend it, and it doesn’t matter where they got it from. They might have found it, or got it from someone who stole it – but they can still spend it. No-one will question where they got it. Transferable is clean and anonymous. That’s not the same for a cheque, which has someone’s name on it. It used to be that cheques were assignable – you could cross out the name on the cheque and write another one. The banks didn’t like this, as circulating cheques meant that people needed to borrow less money from banks. Plus it made the money supply hard to control, and there were fraud issues etc. But you could make a cheque non-assignable by drawing two lines through it. That was called a crossed cheque. Now, crosses are automatically printed on cheque books. So cheques became non-assignable _and_ non-transferable. Banks were very happy to make cheques non-assignable, | Another important Chris Cook invention was to make UCOs assignable, not transferable. To explain: a £10 note is transferable. Anyone who gets it can spend it, and it doesn’t matter where they got it from. They might have found it, or got it from someone who stole it – but they can still spend it. No-one will question where they got it. Transferable is clean and anonymous. That’s not the same for a cheque, which has someone’s name on it. It used to be that cheques were assignable – you could cross out the name on the cheque and write another one. The banks didn’t like this, as circulating cheques meant that people needed to borrow less money from banks. Plus it made the money supply hard to control, and there were fraud issues etc. But you could make a cheque non-assignable by drawing two lines through it. That was called a crossed cheque. Now, crosses are automatically printed on cheque books. So cheques became non-assignable _and_ non-transferable. Banks were very happy to make cheques non-assignable, | ||
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| </ | </ | ||
| - | ### What UCOs can be used for | + | ==== What UCOs can be used for ==== |
| UCOs can help build the commons in all sectors, including housing (rent-credit obligations), | UCOs can help build the commons in all sectors, including housing (rent-credit obligations), | ||
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| - | ## What are the benefits of use-credit obligations? | + | ===== What are the benefits of use-credit obligations? |
| - | ### Help build the commons | + | ==== Help build the commons |
| Commons groups don’t have to go into debt or give away equity – a sure-fire way of delivering infrastructure back to the capitalist world. A UCO costs nothing for the issuer to provide. The commons sector hasn’t been able to grow to obtain infrastructure, | Commons groups don’t have to go into debt or give away equity – a sure-fire way of delivering infrastructure back to the capitalist world. A UCO costs nothing for the issuer to provide. The commons sector hasn’t been able to grow to obtain infrastructure, | ||
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| </ | </ | ||
| - | ### Safe investments | + | ==== Safe investments |
| It’s the 2-stage investment process outlined above that make them safer than crowdfunding, | It’s the 2-stage investment process outlined above that make them safer than crowdfunding, | ||
| - | ### Inflation-proof savings | + | ==== Inflation-proof savings |
| They’re a very interesting form of savings, because they’re not denominated in national currency, but in useful things, like energy, food, rent for housing or office space, haulage, or any product or service. Energy-credit obligations are denominated in kWh, for example. This means that this kind of saving is inflation-proof, | They’re a very interesting form of savings, because they’re not denominated in national currency, but in useful things, like energy, food, rent for housing or office space, haulage, or any product or service. Energy-credit obligations are denominated in kWh, for example. This means that this kind of saving is inflation-proof, | ||
| - | ### Don’t invoke ‘Jevons Paradox’ | + | ==== Don’t invoke ‘Jevons Paradox’ |
| [Jevons Paradox](http:// | [Jevons Paradox](http:// | ||
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| </ | </ | ||
| - | ### Can outcompete the corporate sector | + | ==== Can outcompete the corporate sector |
| There’s nothing to stop corporations from selling UCOs, but they’d face barriers that community groups wouldn’t. For example, community groups would be able to offer lower prices or annual rebates / dividends that corporations wouldn’t because of the need to generate profit for shareholders. So community groups would offer better value. The community sector hasn’t been able to compete with the corporate sector before, because of the difficulty in obtaining investment. UCOs change that. Also, community groups can be membership orgs in ways that corporations can’t, and so can avoid regulatory capture. We can start to build the commons in ways that have been impossible for co-ops, mutuals, community land trusts etc. because of the problem of debt. | There’s nothing to stop corporations from selling UCOs, but they’d face barriers that community groups wouldn’t. For example, community groups would be able to offer lower prices or annual rebates / dividends that corporations wouldn’t because of the need to generate profit for shareholders. So community groups would offer better value. The community sector hasn’t been able to compete with the corporate sector before, because of the difficulty in obtaining investment. UCOs change that. Also, community groups can be membership orgs in ways that corporations can’t, and so can avoid regulatory capture. We can start to build the commons in ways that have been impossible for co-ops, mutuals, community land trusts etc. because of the problem of debt. | ||
| - | ### Sustainability | + | ==== Sustainability |
| Commons groups can provide sustainable infrastructure – renewable energy, natural buildings, compost toilets and reed beds for sewage, organic food etc. | Commons groups can provide sustainable infrastructure – renewable energy, natural buildings, compost toilets and reed beds for sewage, organic food etc. | ||
| - | ## What can I do? | + | ===== What can I do? ===== |
| Think about what UCOs could be used for in your community. Apart from the examples above, they could be for something specific like an independent cinema / hotel / leisure centre. [Contact us](http:// | Think about what UCOs could be used for in your community. Apart from the examples above, they could be for something specific like an independent cinema / hotel / leisure centre. [Contact us](http:// | ||
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| - | ## Further resources | + | ===== Forum ===== |
| + | |||
| + | This topic belongs to the section [[gt: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Further resources | ||
| - [Growing the Commons Forum](https:// | - [Growing the Commons Forum](https:// | ||
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| - [Stroud Housing Commons](https:// | - [Stroud Housing Commons](https:// | ||
| + | ===== Related topics ===== | ||
| + | - [[hoco: | ||
| + | - [[crcl: | ||
| + | - [[crco: | ||
| + | - [Collaborative finance](cofi: | ||
| + | - [[mucr: | ||
| + | - [[comg: | ||
| + | - [[syst: | ||
| + | - [[csas: | ||
| + | - [[comy: | ||
| + | - [[coec: | ||
| - | ## Related topics | ||
| - | ## Specialist curators of this topic | + | ===== Specialist curators of this topic ===== |