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El. knyga: Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms, and Fertility Mattered

3.56/5 (214 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2010
  • Leidėjas: Chelsea Green Publishing Co
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781603581127
  • Formatas: 240 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2010
  • Leidėjas: Chelsea Green Publishing Co
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781603581127

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We have to find a new form of economy, an economy that knows how to govern its limits, an economy that respects nature and acts at the service of man, a situation where political and humanistic choices govern the economy and not the other way around, We have to discover new economic relationships that move at a more natural pace. This is the potential of slow money."---From the Foreword by Carlo Petrini

"Woody Tasch has one of those fast minds that always seem to ask the right slow questions. He is on to something; a new vision of developing capital in a way that might offer a true alternative to faster-and-faster, bigger and bigger, more and more global, I've been saying for years that we need to feed the soil, not the plant---slow money is about feeding the soil of the economy."---Eliot Coleman, farmer and author of The New Organic Grower, Four-Season Harveest, and the Winter Harvest Handbook

"Now that the mathematical manure of maximum leverage has hit the fan of infinite natural resources. [ Tasch] presents a compelling case for the rich compost of `slow' money, and for investment criteria that can sustain and preserve the planet's wealth for generations to come. Indispensable reading, to be placed on the same shelf as Wendell Berry and E. F. Schumacher."---Gregory Whitehead, Treasurer, The Whitehead Foundation

"This book is an essential read for anyone who is concerned about the human condition and our planet, Few-have taken the idea of walking your talk this much to its essence---all the way to where money meets the earth, so that we can begin to build a truly healthy economy. ---Mark Finser, Chair of the Board, RSF Social Finance

"Every once in a while, an idea comes around that you immediately know is not only a good one, but in fact is an absolutely necessary one Slow money is such an idea."---Tom Stearns, President, High Mowing Organic Seeds.

NPR calls it a movement. Acres U.S.A. calls it a revolution. Business week online calls it "one of the big ideas for 2010." Change.org calls it one of the top fifteen Ideas For Change.

Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money presents the path for bringing money back down to eart---philosophically, strategically, and pragmatically---and with an entrepreneurial spirit that is informed by decades of work by the thousands of CEOs, investors, grantmakers, food producers, and consumers who are seeding the restorative economy.

The months and years ahead will surely continue to see a flood of books proposing micro- and macro-economic fixes to the financial crises of the day. Inquiries into the Nature of Slow Money brings a different visison---a meta-economic vision, looking abouve the top line and below the bottom line, a new way of seeing what is going on in the soil of the economy.

This is the path toward a financial system that serves people and place as much as it serves industry sectors and markets, the path toward the nurture capital industry, serving one million investors investing one percent of their assets in local food systems.

Slow Money emerges from Woody Tasch's decades of work as a venture capitalist; foundation treasurer, and entrepreneur. His explorations shed new light on a truer, more beautiful, more prudent kind of fiduciary responsibility---a fiduciary responsibility that is not stuck in the industrial concepts of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, but which reflects the economic, social, and environmental realities of the twenty first century.

These inquiries take us from the jokes of his father to the insights of his son, from the boardrooms of foundations and start-up companies to the farm fields of Vermont, from gopher holes in New Mexico to the possibilities of an alternative stock exchange, from Carlo Petrini to Muhammad Yunus, from Thoreau to Soros.

Is it a movement or is it an investment strategy? Yes.

Recenzijos

"Every once in a while, an idea comes around that you immediately know is not only a good one, but in fact is an absolutely necessary one. Slow Money is such an idea. Money is a powerful thing and whatever we collectively put our money into goes a long way toward creating the world that we live in. So far, those choices have led to many things, including a broken world food system, where nobody knows where their food comes from or what it takes to grow it. To become so divorced from something as essential as our food has had many disastrous consequences. I have great hope that sustainable, locally based food systems will help us all in more ways than we imagine. Slow Money can play a huge role in doing this and Woody's book is an inspiration to all of us working in sustainable agriculture. I can't wait to live in a world supported by Slow Money."--Tom Stearns, President, High Mowing Organic Seeds "Slow Money is right on the money."--Tim Storrow, Executive Director, Castanea Foundation, Inc.

Foreword ix
Prologue xi
PART ONE Slow Money
1 Slow Money
3(5)
2 Reconnoitering
8(85)
3 Back Down to Earth
93(30)
PART TWO Ground Zero
4 In the Shadow of the Twin Towers
123(21)
5 The War on Terroir
144(27)
6 The Pursuit of Zero
171(22)
Epilogue 193(8)
Acknowledgments 201
Woody Tasch is the Founder and Chairman of Slow Money, a non-profit headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, with an alliance of national and international chapters. Slow Money took root in 2009 when Tasch wrote his groundbreaking book Inquiries Into the Nature of Slow Money: Investing as if Food, Farms, and Fertility Mattered.



Tasch is widely regarded as a pioneer of the concepts of patient capital, mission-related investing and community-building venture capital. For ten years before founding Slow Money, he was the Chairman of Investors Circle, a network of investors that funds startups that emphasize sustainable business practices. Tasch was founding chairman of the Community Development Venture Capital Alliance and Treasurer of the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation during the 90s, where he had the foresight to invest $1.25 million in Stonyfield Farm, which returned 3x cash-on-cash in five years.



Tasch is now working on the sequel to his first book, revisiting the fundamental principles of Slow Money, based on the experience of the last four years launching the organization and movement. To date, Slow Money has moved $30 million into 221 small food businesses around the country, including farms, creameries, grain mills, niche organic brands, local processing, distribution and seed companies, and restaurants.

Carlo Petrini, born in the small northern Italian town of Bra in 1949, is the founder and international president of the Slow Food movement, committed to the promotion of good, clean and fair food. The author of several books, he contributes regularly to Italian dailies and magazines on matters related to gastronomy and food politics. To write Terra Madre, he collaborated closely with Carlo Bogliotti, an editor of the Slowfood magazine and governor of the Slow Food Italy association.