Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?

Can money buy everything? Or are there goods and services that markets do not honour and money should not buy? While current debates on the increasing reach of markets usually present the choice in terms of either strictly social market or strictly monetary market, this paper proposes a thi...

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Main Authors: Liew, Hui Xian., Liaw, Wellisa Leono., Low, Pui Yee.
Other Authors: David Alexander Reisman
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52450
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-524502020-07-13T06:05:24Z Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore? Liew, Hui Xian. Liaw, Wellisa Leono. Low, Pui Yee. David Alexander Reisman School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences DRNTU::Humanities Can money buy everything? Or are there goods and services that markets do not honour and money should not buy? While current debates on the increasing reach of markets usually present the choice in terms of either strictly social market or strictly monetary market, this paper proposes a third, intermediate option: a Complementary Currency System (CCS), or a parallel system of exchange. We propose a CCS in the form of an online game called „SingaReach‟. SingaReach aims to tackle the challenge of providing affordable elderly care in Singapore that caters to both the physical needs for assistance and the psychological needs for companionship and contribution of the elderly. SingaReach also allows people to exercise both their selfish and altruistic desires at the same time. To test the concept with our target groups, we carried out 7 experiments with 65 participants. The experiment results show that SingaReach leads to gains from trade and monetary cost savings. In addition, the SingaReach platform contains features of both social and monetary markets, showing that the choice between strictly social and strictly monetary market is an unnecessarily restrictive one. By moving out of the analytical blind spot of having a single type of currency, we show that man-made institutions can adapt to the complexity of human nature, and that there is much to gain from doing so. Bachelor of Arts 2013-05-09T03:16:06Z 2013-05-09T03:16:06Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52450 en Nanyang Technological University 90 p. application/pdf text/html
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
DRNTU::Humanities
Liew, Hui Xian.
Liaw, Wellisa Leono.
Low, Pui Yee.
Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
description Can money buy everything? Or are there goods and services that markets do not honour and money should not buy? While current debates on the increasing reach of markets usually present the choice in terms of either strictly social market or strictly monetary market, this paper proposes a third, intermediate option: a Complementary Currency System (CCS), or a parallel system of exchange. We propose a CCS in the form of an online game called „SingaReach‟. SingaReach aims to tackle the challenge of providing affordable elderly care in Singapore that caters to both the physical needs for assistance and the psychological needs for companionship and contribution of the elderly. SingaReach also allows people to exercise both their selfish and altruistic desires at the same time. To test the concept with our target groups, we carried out 7 experiments with 65 participants. The experiment results show that SingaReach leads to gains from trade and monetary cost savings. In addition, the SingaReach platform contains features of both social and monetary markets, showing that the choice between strictly social and strictly monetary market is an unnecessarily restrictive one. By moving out of the analytical blind spot of having a single type of currency, we show that man-made institutions can adapt to the complexity of human nature, and that there is much to gain from doing so.
author2 David Alexander Reisman
author_facet David Alexander Reisman
Liew, Hui Xian.
Liaw, Wellisa Leono.
Low, Pui Yee.
format Final Year Project
author Liew, Hui Xian.
Liaw, Wellisa Leono.
Low, Pui Yee.
author_sort Liew, Hui Xian.
title Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
title_short Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
title_full Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
title_fullStr Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
title_full_unstemmed Will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in Singapore?
title_sort will compensating volunteers via a complementary currency system increase volunteering activities for elderly care in singapore?
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52450
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