Recognizing how financial systems impose dominant-culture values and extracting yourself through intentional, culturally-grounded economic practices.
As an Ethiopian philosopher writing during colonial pressures, Zera Yacob understood how foreign systems impose domination. Modern money colonialism works similarly: Western banking norms, debt-based economies, and consumption values colonize minds across cultures. Decolonial finance means reclaiming economic autonomy by questioning whose financial system you inhabit. Why do you use particular banks? Whose investment philosophy guides you? Do your money practices reflect your values or imposed expectations? Schools teach capitalist finance as inevitable truth, not cultural choice. Decolonial practice includes: supporting community lending circles, understanding Islamic or other non-Western finance approaches, questioning debt's moral framing, building economic interdependence within trusted communities. This isn't rejection of modern tools but conscious choice about which systems serve your dignity. By examining how colonized thinking shapes your financial beliefs, you reclaim agency. Financial decolonization means building economic practices that reflect your culture, values, and reasoning—not inherited domination disguised as common sense.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.