Severity: High — money ambiguity erodes trust faster than open conflict does. Where it bites: Growth and mature stages, once there’s a treasury worth not understanding. Already living this? Jump to If it’s already happening.
Sound familiar?
There’s money moving through the community — dues, a shared account, grants, a building fund — and one or two people manage it. They’re trusted, and probably doing their honest best. But nobody else can actually see the picture: what came in, what went out, what’s held in reserve, what that big expense last year was. When you ask, the answer is a reassuring “it’s handled.” And slowly, the gap between what members assume and what’s actually true becomes a quiet, load-bearing source of unease.
Signs this is happening to you
- Only one or two people know the real state of the community’s finances.
- There’s no regular, readable financial report everyone can see.
- “Don’t worry, it’s handled” is the answer to money questions.
- Members can’t tell what they’ve collectively paid for, or what reserves exist.
- Spending decisions happen without visible budgets or limits.
This is not the same as keeping specific sensitive items private by an explicit, agreed exception. The tell is that financial flows are opaque by default — visibility depends on being in the right circle, not on a rule.
Why it happens
Money is tedious to make transparent and easy to leave to “whoever’s good with numbers.” But opacity quietly concentrates power: whoever holds the financial picture holds leverage, and the distance between what members assume and what’s real becomes a slow-acting trust bomb. As the spec puts it, money plus ambiguity destroys trust faster than conflict does.
The formal stress test (for auditors)
Failure Mode — Shared financial flows are invisible to most members by default.
Layers Involved — Layer 3 (Economy)
Relevant Invariants
- 3.1 Economic transparency by default
- 3.4 No unbounded accumulation of internal power
Test Condition — Treasury state, income, and spending are known only to a few, with no regular reporting.
Expected RCOS Behavior — Financial flows are transparent to members by default, with limited explicit exceptions; spending authority and limits are visible.
Pass Criteria — Members can see shared resources, flows, and obligations.
Fail Criteria — Financial visibility depends on informal access.
How mature is your community on this?
Pass/fail is too blunt for real life — most communities are partway. Find your rung, then aim for the next one.
| Level | What it looks like |
|---|---|
| L0 — Implicit | Finances live with one or two people; no shared visibility. |
| L1 — Named | The group knows finances are opaque but hasn’t set transparency rules. |
| L2 — Documented | A Treasury Ruleset defines transparency requirements, spending authority, and reporting cadence. |
| L3 — Enforced & rehearsed | Financial flows are visible by default; regular reports are actually read; exceptions are explicit and few. |
Most communities that recognise themselves here sit at L0 or L1. The goal isn’t perfection — it’s moving up one rung.
How RCOS prevents this
RCOS makes transparency the financial default, not a favour:
- Treasury Ruleset — transparency requirements, spending authority by amount, and reserve and reporting rules.
- Internal Economy Protocol — make flows and obligations visible as a default state.
See also the spec: Layer 3 — Treasury Management and Commons vs Private Resources.
If it’s already happening
If the finances live in someone’s head, surface them:
- Publish a current snapshot — balances, income, spending, reserves. Even a rough one ends the asymmetry.
- Set a reporting cadence so visibility is routine, not something members have to request.
- Define spending authority and limits so money decisions become legible.
- Watch the cascade — whoever holds the financial picture is quietly accumulating power.
What this failure tends to trigger
- Invisible Power via Responsibilities — the person who “handles the money” becomes indispensable and powerful.
- Conflict Avoidance Normalization — money suspicion festers because it’s awkward to raise.
Related stress tests
- Commons Privatization through Land Sales — opacity is what lets the biggest asset decisions happen without scrutiny.