This is a list of monetary reformers from the past to the present according to several schools of thought.
Monetary reformers primarily belong to the following groups:
Supporters of publicly issued money who oppose charging interest on issuance of money, formerly called "Greenbackers" in late 19th century United States,
the Post-Keynesian School who[who?] generally wish to regulate or reduce leverage and debt in the economy or direct it to "productive, non-speculative" uses.[citation needed]
Most of these groups[vague] are critical of fractional-reserve banking,[1][2] a practice which is described by critics as "creating money out of thin air". According to the Bank of England "rather than banks lending out deposits that are placed with them, the act of lending creates deposits – the reverse of the sequence typically described in textbooks".[3]
Public, community and self-issuance of money
Publicly issued, debt-free money or interest-free credit
^ abcd(in French) "Monnaie pleine : une opportunité en Suisse pour changer la monnaie" [The "sovereign money" initiative: an opportunity to change currency in Switzerland], La revue durable, number 60, winter-spring 2017-2018, pages 26-29.