Oh, I do. Ripple isn't comparable to a LETS. Ripple cannot function without a common currency with an external valuation, be it a fiat dollar or dollar equivilent, or bitcoin or silver or gold or Ithica Hours. Ripple is not currency, it's a distributed web-of-trust credit system.
If you try to use an unestablished or uncommon currency over Ripple, you will fail.
Of course Ripple is comparable to LETS. Ripple is a generalization of LETS. LETS is just a concrete Ripple topology: you can stablish a LETS currency (or a time banking system for that matter) inside of a Ripple network.
LETS with hours (not egalitarian hours, but defined as "an hour of unskilled and not painful work") have proved to work.
I agree Ripple is not a currency, it is many currencies. My hour denominated credit would be one currency, your ounces of silver denominated credit would be another one, my ounces of silver denominated credit would be another one (no, my credit is not equivalent and fungible to yours, even in the same unit), McDonald's big mac denominated credit would be another currency. But those currencies are not universally accepted, you need the "chain exchange" ripple is to be able to pay to someone that doesn't accept directly any of your currencies. With Ripple, everyone can issue his own currency.
If cash were a ripple node (like a LETS organization can be), every other node would accept its credit and it would not accept credit from anyone. Therefore, the initial issued currency would never be redeemed for services (this inanimated node doesn't provide any service). The advantage of having IOUs of this cash node is that those IOUs are the more liquid ones (everybody accepts them) and will always allow you to pay, even to people to whom you're not even indirectly connected with. Credit money (ripple, LETS) is a relationship between two agents, but cash is a relationship between one agent and everybody else. That's what I mean by money is a common.
It's not neccessary that users can avoid all fees. Some level of fees can be unavoidable, but just not all that would equate to demurrage. Again, it's like paying for the safety deposit box for your gold. A regular bank box is cheaper than a gold repository box, but has reduced security. That's what you want to do, get users to consolodate holdings in order to maximize the security model with respect to their costs. Some people will choose more anominity over security, some costs over anominity and some will pay for the security.
No, that's not what I want to do. I want money holders to pay for the privileged relationship they have with the rest of the money users. If not, money-capital owners (and other capital owners, given that capital-money sustains artificially a minimum yield for all capitals) can get indefinetely from society without giving anything in exchange. Even worse, if they re-lend the interest (compound interest) their capital will grow exponentially without doing nothing, which is obviously unsustainable, by this process you eventually get a credit collapse that is usually called an economic cycle.
I also want to eliminate the short-term thinking that interest imposes on the financial market.
I'm not sure what you should call it, perhaps a holding fee? But it's not demurrage, because it doesn't actually function in the (money) market like demurrage. Demurrage is the cost of long term security, excluding transaction costs (of security or otherwise). A fee that was relative to the age of a transaction (perferablely less a grace period that security is already paid for by the transaction processing fees), but not relative to the value of the transaction, would be demurrage. You want to encourage users to consolodate holdings into fewer transactions, as well as encourage spending. You don't really need to encourage spending, either. Bitcoin is already the lesser of alternative currencies in the "bad money chases good money out of the market" catagory.
And I still question your theory that demurrage can be used to effectively suppress the market interest rate, setablished by third parties in the absence of a central baking authority.
It is often called liquidity fee, circulation incentive, or circulation protection fee. But I think demurrage is the most common name this currency concepts gets. I know that for other things it has another meaning, that's why the wikipedia has an independent entry for
demurrage and
demurrage(currency).
Why you won't accept freicoins as payment? Once you have them, you can spend them or lend them, but there's no point in keeping them.
If you can buy all the things you need to start your business with either bitcoin or freicoin.
But you can't, and you are assuming that you can get there. I'm saying thta is not ever going to happen, because if the consumer is given a choice etween two comparable currencies, one that rots value while the other does not, consumers are going to forever favor Bitcoin. Freicoin would never stand a chance on an even open market.
Why would you borrow bitcoins instead of freicoins? You know you will spend both fast to buy your capital, why are you worried about freicoins losing value if you're going to spend them?
You will prefer to borrow freicoins because of its cheaper interest.
Consumers will borrow in bitcoin because they will be able to spend in bitcoin, and sellers will price in bitcoin because they can get paid in bitcoin. Neither will happen for freicoin now that bitcoin has the market advantage so long as the value rots, and there is nothing that a user can do to reduce or avoid the fees.
Ok, so you accept that if other people accept it as payment, you as merchant would accept them, as a consumer you would spend them first and as entrepreneur you would prefer to borrow them (at a lower interest rate), you just don't think any merchant would ever accept them.
That's something.
Now I have some questions:
Why the worgl experiment was a success in Austria during the great depression?
Why the central bank felt so threaten by it that it has to exercise his monopoly on money creation and forbid it?
Why there's so many local (most of them private) currencies with demurrage working today?
Why lossing 5% of the nominal value would make freicoins value drop to zero and and losing real value by inflation doesn't destroys national currencies overnight?
If you say because of legal tender laws, why Ven (a private currency based on a basket of national currencies) doesn't get destroyed in the same way?
You keep saying to many variables but you don't say what variables. What makes V be volatile in your opinion?
consumer sentiment.
Employment
Government actions
Wars and rumors of wars.
And many more besides. Velocity is affected by so many things that re both unpredictable and beyond your control.
Fair enough. Then I just claim that V would be more stable (and higher) with demurrage than without it, not completely stable.
Yes, I believe in the time prefereces of money.
I understand that, what I don't understand is why you call crap another theory that you know for a few days. And why can't you explain what is wrong with it if you're that confident that is crap.
"abstinence theory" in Gesell's words.
I understand why you think the way you do but you can't understand how I can think the way I do. Don't you feel the need to understand where I'm wrong or what am I missing?
I'm pretty sure that I do understand what you think should happen, and I think that you are wrong. Feel free to prove me wrong.
Of course if there's interest the time preference on money applies. But that's obvious, that doesn't explain interest. The theory assumes that what is true for money is also truth for other goods, which is false.
Why would Robinson prefer 500 fish today over 500 fish next week if you're not going to eat anymore today and fish rots?
For the short term thinking that interest imposes on us (no, money is not value neutral, it is the water where we swim and it influences us), here's an example:
Tree Metaphor
Imagine you plant a tree. In ten years, that tree can give you $100 in lamber and in 100 years, $ 1000.
Now from the financial perspective:
With a currency that yields 5% interest, $100 in ten years are equivalent to $ 61.39 today. And $1000 in 100 years are equivalent to $ 7.60 today.
If the currency has 5% demurrage, $100 in ten years are equivalent to $ 167.02 today. And $1000 in 100 years are equivalent to $ 168,903.82 today.
With interest, the same stuff in the future is valued less than today. With demurrage, the same stuff in the future is valued more than today.
But with demurrage you could have zero interest rates, so $100 in ten years are equivalent to $100 today and $1000 in 100 years are equivalent to $1000 today.
This proves that the structure of money has an impact in our way to value things over time.