Why is the Local Economy Important?

As a community development worker for over 30 years, I have seen many community audits. Very few even mention the local economy; it seems to be a blind spot in the world of community development. Why is this? How can we bring about lasting change for the better without developing the local economy? The alternative is dependence on grants or mainstream funding; with the recession these are less of an industry than they used to be. Grants and mainstream funding are dependent on decisions made by people who live and work outside of the applicant community. The big advantage of the local economy is it is something to which local people contribute; they do not need permission.

I have written several posts about the marketplace. The upshot is we’ve  allowed the neo-liberal right to hijack this word to favour the activities of the big corporations; they’re the opposite of the market because they undermine it. They

  • extract money from local economies
  • stash money they make outside the UK to avoid paying taxes.
  • use the most economic approach and so pay low wages, meaning people have less to spend in the local economy.
  • have no interest in everything else that contributes to the marketplace because it doesn’t contribute to their profits.

In summary the marketplace has little to do with profit and everything to do with community. When people can meet and freely interact they will naturally make deals and develop new ideas. The omni-corporate extraction of decision-making from the local and its relocation to the global means the interactions that generate genuine innovation are less likely to happen.  Views tend to polarise and competing ideologies are a poor basis for building trusting relationships.

Large scale activities are always better done by the statutory sector who have (or had) the infrastructure to employ people on reasonable wages. The argument that the private sector is more economic depends on lower wages. This reduces money circulating in neighbourhoods. The current recession was caused by this neo-liberal approach.

The other part is the role of banks. We need to understand how the banks create money. Every time they make a loan, they create money. Once upon a time you needed money to make a loan. It seems obvious. If I loan you £100 in bank notes, I must have £100 in bank notes to start with. However, if I credit £100 to your bank account a I don’t have to actually have that £100. So, you can calculate the percentage of money loaned covered by reserves.

If I am trading, I am helping  money circulate in the local economy. The corporate economy creates money through loans to corporations that tend to concentrate money in fewer hands and takes it out of local economies. First, banks make loans to bigger corporations because they trust them. Second, repayments return to the bank, translating newly created money into real money.

This fractional reserve banking practically extracts money from the local economy and concentrates it in the hands of banks and large businesses. To legislate to prevent banks loaning more than they have (or at least to restrict it) would be a good first step. But banking also needs to be deployed to support small businesses and not the corporations.

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About the Author

I've been a community development worker since the early 1980s in Tyneside, Teesside and South Yorkshire. I've also worked nationally for the Methodist Church for eight years supporting community projects through the church's grants programme. These days I am developing an online community development practice combining non-directive consultancy, strategic management, participatory methods and development work online and offline. If you're interested contact me for a free consultation.

Leave a Reply 4 comments

Mark Woodhead - October 14, 2014 Reply

Is the local economy a blind spot in community development? Maybe, in some situations, but it certainly has not always been the case. The Community Development Projects of the early seventies paid a lot of attention to the economy – see CDP publications such as ‘The Costs of Industrial Change’. I think the main emphasis was on analysis and campaigning rather than on community development involvement in developing local economic initiatives. I think this emphasis was linked to a sense that, at least in the areas where these CDPs operated, ‘big players’ and large external economic forces were major determinants of local people’s lives. (The CDPs were in a dozen deprived areas around the country, such as Batley in West Yorkshire and Hillfields, Coventry).

The reference to the circulation of money in the local economy certainly has links with some interesting and valuable work that has been done by the New Economics Foundation on ‘LM3’ and ‘Plugging the Leaks’, so there is certainly some interest in, and work on, these issues – but maybe some community development workers aren’t making links with this.

Chris - October 15, 2014 Reply

Thanks Mark for the reminder about the CDPs. Yes there has been analysis of the impact of big businesses on communities; I mentioned this with reference to Billingham in the previous post in this sequence, “So, What is the Local Economy?” The impact of big businesses on communities is hard to ignore although not impossible. My main point though is community development has focused on grant aided projects and there is little evidence this results in lasting change. The local economy may be a more effective approach to community development in terms of both incentives to participation and inclusiveness. We have been blinded to the power of the local economy to effect change by the ideological struggle against capitalism. But the rise of mutuals in the 19th century was radical and local economic development. Thanks for the references to the NEF papers. I’ll have a look at them. I used to be more positive about NEF until they wondered off in search of happiness.

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