The People’s Problem

The National Fiat Debt-Interest Spiral

The People’s Solution

A Dynamic, Global Democratic, Natural Capital–Backed Ecological Eco Monetary System

1. Overview

The people’s GRB proposes an Eco monetary system where money issuance is backed by Earth’s measurable ecological conditions. The objective is to transition from debt-based fiat systems to a natural resource, regeneration-linked Eco monetary architecture.

Capitalization Architecture

An initial ꫀ7.0 quadrillion Eco supply is dynamically adjusted based on verified ecological regeneration and environmental impact. The ꫀ7.0q figure is the initial global capitalization designed to include the combined value of Earth’s current (ꫀ5.0q) natural capital, ꫀ1.0q existing fiat-denominated assets, and ꫀ1.0q transition reserves to begin overnight.

Market-based price discovery operates within the Eco system, with prices reflecting both supply-demand dynamics and ecological cost integration at parity with the current USD.

Structural Layers

People’s direct democratic governance collectively determine:

• Monetary policy parameters
• Ecological thresholds
• System rules and updates

This replaces centralized monetary authority with democratic human governance.

2. Core Problem

All fiat systems are debt-issued and interest-bearing.

This structure creates systemic incentives for:

• Continuous economic expansion
• Accelerated resource extraction
• Wealth concentration
• Environmental degradation
• Financial instability driven by leverage cycles

While Earth’s ecosystems continuously regenerate natural capital (forests, oceans, biodiversity systems), this value is not integrated into fiat accounting systems.

As a result, economic measurement is structurally decoupled from ecological reality.

3. Proposed Solution

GRB introduces currency issuance tied to ecological performance.

Eco (ꫀ): Ecological Currency

Eco is a digitally native global unit designed to function as a public monetary layer reflecting planetary conditions.

Core properties:

• Non-debt issued (no borrowing-based expansion)
• Interest-free issuance mechanism
• Transparent, auditable ledger system
• Globally accessible digital infrastructure
• Designed for integration with real-world ecological data systems

4. Monetary Principle

Eco supply is determined by a system-wide ecological balance function:

Net Eco Supply = Regeneration − Ecological Impact

Regeneration represents verified improvements in ecological systems (e.g., reforestation, biodiversity recovery, ecosystem restoration)

Ecological Impact represents measured environmental degradation (e.g., emissions, habitat loss, resource depletion)

This establishes a closed-loop feedback system where:

Positive ecological outcomes expand monetary capacity
Negative ecological outcomes contract monetary capacity

5. Measurement System

GRB relies on multi-source environmental verification to increase accuracy:

• Satellite-based Earth observation systems
• Ground-level environmental sensor networks
• Independent scientific datasets
• Industrial and supply chain reporting
• Open audit layers for verification and transparency

AI systems are used for data reconciliation, aggregation and administration.
Underlying datasets remain publicly auditable.

6. System Architecture

GRB operates as a layered economic model:

A. Stock Layer

Represents total ecological and economic baseline assets used for system reference.

B. Flow Layer

Controls issuance, contraction, and circulation of Eco based on ecological inputs.

C. Transition Layer

Enables gradual mapping between existing fiat-denominated systems and the Eco framework.

7. Governance Model

GRB separates governance and execution:

Humans define rules: thresholds, constraints, and monetary parameters
AI systems execute accounting functions: measurement, reconciliation, and system updates

Governance is intended to be:

• Distributed
• Transparent
• Open-source
• Auditable
• No single-entity control

Rule changes are subject to democratic decision-making.

8. Participation Model

GRB is designed as a globally inclusive system:

• Universal account access (one human, one account principle)
• Privacy-preserving identity mechanisms
• Equal entry into the monetary system

9. Economic Distribution Model

Eco includes a baseline distribution mechanism intended to ensure universal participation in the system:

• A per-capita ecological dividend is issued under system rules
Allocation priorities emphasize ecological restoration, infrastructure, health systems, education, and scientific development
Distribution adjusts dynamically based on ecological system conditions

10. Transition Strategy

The transition from fiat systems is designed as gradual and voluntary:

Adoption Phase

Individuals, organizations, and institutions optionally participate in Eco systems.
Network Expansion Phase
Increasing usage shifts pricing, contracts, and trade into Eco denomination.
Unit of Account Transition
Eco becomes a primary reference unit for value measurement across participating systems.

Existing ownership structures remain intact; only the monetary accounting layer evolves.

11. Core Design Objective

GRB is built on a single systemic principle:

Money should reflect the condition of the systems that sustain life.

This reframes monetary issuance as a function of ecological state rather than financial debt creation.

12. Intended Outcome

If fully implemented, GRB aims to:

Align economic incentives with ecological stability
Reduce dependence on debt-driven growth mechanisms
Increase transparency in monetary systems
Enable universal participation in global economic infrastructure
Integrate real-world environmental data into economic decision-making

13. Final Statement

The Global Resources Bank proposes a structural shift in how money is defined:

From a debt obligation system
→ to a real-time ecological accounting system

From extraction-based incentives
→ to regeneration-based incentives

From financial abstraction
→ to measurable planetary feedback integration

Global Resources Bank (GRB)
Eco (ꫀ): Ecological Monetary System Framework
Authors: Jo Anne Hissey, John Pozzi
Contact: john.pozzi@grb.net