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Digital municipal currencies as a policy instrument for counter-politics : The case of the State of Rio de Janeiro

Barinaga, Ester LU orcid (2024) Local Democracy Academy (Swedish International Centre for Local Democracy)
Abstract
At the onset of the pandemic, Brazil’s Federal government approved an emergency basic income to be transferred to a variety of groups that had not earlier received any of the established welfare programs. Its implementation was however riddled with challenges. With a large informal economy, many Brazilian citizens were missing from the Federal Government’s registry and, even if registered, many did not have a bank account. During a time of increased health risk, agglomerations formed at the doors of government agencies and bank offices across the country as citizens queued to register, renew their national identity cards, and start a bank account through which to receive the emergency basic income they were now eligible to. In contrast, in... (More)
At the onset of the pandemic, Brazil’s Federal government approved an emergency basic income to be transferred to a variety of groups that had not earlier received any of the established welfare programs. Its implementation was however riddled with challenges. With a large informal economy, many Brazilian citizens were missing from the Federal Government’s registry and, even if registered, many did not have a bank account. During a time of increased health risk, agglomerations formed at the doors of government agencies and bank offices across the country as citizens queued to register, renew their national identity cards, and start a bank account through which to receive the emergency basic income they were now eligible to. In contrast, in Maricá – a city of about 160,000 inhabitants in the State of Rio de Janeiro – the newly approved emergency basic income was not only easily implemented reaching out to 42% of its population (Freitas, 2022), it also led to the rapid registration of many informal traders, which helped the enforcement of the lockdown in the city during the pandemic crisis (Rodrigues & Neumann, 2021). The difference: Maricá paid the emergency basic income in Mumbucas – a municipal currency it had been running digitally since 2018. In Maricá, residents simply downloaded the Mumbuca app to register and claim their rightful basic income (Gonzalez et al, 2021).

As the pandemic ebbed away and municipalities were confronted with increased levels of poverty and social vulnerability, in Rio de Janeiro, municipalities are following Maricá’s lead to experiment with their own municipal digital currencies to implement progressive welfare programs. The paper compares the design, governance, and management of six of these municipal currencies (those in Cabo Frío, Iguaba Grande, Saquarema, Itaboraí, Maricá and Niterói). Based on interviews with mayors, directors of social services, coordinators of digital municipal currencies, representatives of community banks, traders and beneficiaries, the paper argues that municipal currencies offer a flexible instrument to adapt public policies to the needs and priorities of each municipality. In this flexibility, we see the potential of municipal currencies as a policy instrument to catalyze a “new municipalist” counter-movement (Thompson, 2020). Enabling municipalities to define and pursue their own autonomous welfare policies, municipalities in Rio de Janeiro are carving a novel path for urban strategies that advance a transformative politics that is locally adapted yet transcends the local scale (Russell, 2017). With municipalities across the world facing increased socio-economic inequality, the lessons are relevant beyond Brazil.
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
keywords
Digital municipal currency, Brasil, policy tool, counter-politics
conference name
Local Democracy Academy (Swedish International Centre for Local Democracy)
conference location
Lund, Sweden
conference dates
2024-08-26 - 2024-08-29
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fbef88fb-f334-4704-ad2d-cfaa5e2248a9
date added to LUP
2025-02-28 14:06:44
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:46:30
@misc{fbef88fb-f334-4704-ad2d-cfaa5e2248a9,
  abstract     = {{At the onset of the pandemic, Brazil’s Federal government approved an emergency basic income to be transferred to a variety of groups that had not earlier received any of the established welfare programs. Its implementation was however riddled with challenges. With a large informal economy, many Brazilian citizens were missing from the Federal Government’s registry and, even if registered, many did not have a bank account. During a time of increased health risk, agglomerations formed at the doors of government agencies and bank offices across the country as citizens queued to register, renew their national identity cards, and start a bank account through which to receive the emergency basic income they were now eligible to. In contrast, in Maricá – a city of about 160,000 inhabitants in the State of Rio de Janeiro – the newly approved emergency basic income was not only easily implemented reaching out to 42% of its population (Freitas, 2022), it also led to the rapid registration of many informal traders, which helped the enforcement of the lockdown in the city during the pandemic crisis (Rodrigues &amp; Neumann, 2021). The difference: Maricá paid the emergency basic income in Mumbucas – a municipal currency it had been running digitally since 2018. In Maricá, residents simply downloaded the Mumbuca app to register and claim their rightful basic income (Gonzalez et al, 2021).<br/><br/>As the pandemic ebbed away and municipalities were confronted with increased levels of poverty and social vulnerability, in Rio de Janeiro, municipalities are following Maricá’s lead to experiment with their own municipal digital currencies to implement progressive welfare programs. The paper compares the design, governance, and management of six of these municipal currencies (those in Cabo Frío, Iguaba Grande, Saquarema, Itaboraí, Maricá and Niterói). Based on interviews with mayors, directors of social services, coordinators of digital municipal currencies, representatives of community banks, traders and beneficiaries, the paper argues that municipal currencies offer a flexible instrument to adapt public policies to the needs and priorities of each municipality. In this flexibility, we see the potential of municipal currencies as a policy instrument to catalyze a “new municipalist” counter-movement (Thompson, 2020). Enabling municipalities to define and pursue their own autonomous welfare policies, municipalities in Rio de Janeiro are carving a novel path for urban strategies that advance a transformative politics that is locally adapted yet transcends the local scale (Russell, 2017). With municipalities across the world facing increased socio-economic inequality, the lessons are relevant beyond Brazil. <br/>}},
  author       = {{Barinaga, Ester}},
  keywords     = {{Digital municipal currency; Brasil; policy tool; counter-politics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{08}},
  title        = {{Digital municipal currencies as a policy instrument for counter-politics : The case of the State of Rio de Janeiro}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}