Most basic income experiments do not last forever. But what if a one-time grant or short-term basic income could become a lasting community resource?
At
@grassEcon , we are exploring how pooled basic income and one-off endowments can be seeded into commitment pools in villages and refugee camps. Instead of ending as one-time transfers, these funds become shared liquidity that community members access in rotation while continuing to support one another through labor, services, goods, and mutual accountability.
This approach helps donations circulate further, strengthens local cooperation, supports productive livelihoods, and leaves behind stronger systems of exchange and care.
Recent collaborations with
fairspirit.com and
@RelayFunder show how even modest amounts of outside funding can become more sustainable when stewarded inside community-governed pools. From farm inputs in Kiriba to zero-interest rotating support in refugee communities, commitment pooling turns short-term aid into regenerative community infrastructure.
grassecon.substack.com/p/whe…