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Home > Why We're Different >Our No Deficit Policy

Our “No Deficit” Policy

Barter exchanges operate on the ability to know the balance and trading obligations of all members and to regulate the activity between those who are obligated to accept trade (those in debt) and those who wish to spend (those in credit).

Unfortunately the following scenarios can, and does, happen:

  1. The exchange issues too high a credit limit to a business that will never be able to repay it (or not be able to repay it within a reasonable amount of time).

    • E.g. a florist is given (and spends) a $20,000 credit limit yet is only able to comfortably accept $500 in barter per month resulting in the member eternally being in debt.

      This is $20,000 taken from the monetary supply and is akin to the exchange operator “stealing” $20,000 in cash from the marketplace as this money can never be used by anyone else in the barter network.


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   Our “No Deficit” Policy
  1. A member is not credit checked (or is having unforeseen difficulties) and runs up a huge commitment and then leaves. This can be resolved through careful monitoring of all accounts and ensuring that each member has an active plan to trade out of any debt within a given time. When legal action is necessary to recover a debt any cash awarded to the exchange is often less than the total balance owing and the barter exchange almost always keeps this cash themselves when they have a real obligation to repay the debt to the exchanges marketplace in goods or services which they can acquire for the recovered cash and offer for trade dollars – thereby maintaining the balance of debits and credits across all members.

    • Most barter exchanges simply do not have an internal mechanism for managing bad debts or poor monetary flow within their network because they lack the detailed knowledge of the economic principles required to operate a monetary system.

  2. The exchange owners make purchases using barter dollars, thereby going into debt in the exchange, and never repaying this balance.

    • This causes inflation as the total members obligated to accept barter (those with debit balances) is less than the total members wishing to spend (credit balances). Bartercard, for example, has openly stated in their 2006 Annual Report, issued to the Alternative Investment Market in London, that this is something they regularly do.

Ormita operates a “no deficit policy” whereby we never make a purchase on barter ourselves unless we have the barter dollars in our own account to back it up. Unlike other exchange owners who spend “barter dollars” that they may not own, Ormita makes use of its strong cash position to introduce new customers into our network with occasional direct cash purchases.



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