First, thanks to this author for an edifying article--except for the part about identifying central bank policy as "government policy" (5th para.).
I thought this author--and anyone reading this article--might find interesting a monetary paradigm I have developed that could be implemented within the existing institutional structure of the economic system. The existing economy would become fully self-regulating, with no unemployment, poverty, taxes, or public debt and increased sustainability. [The absence of taxes/public debt would depend on total spending by government not exceeding its current per capita level.]
It can be thought of as kind of permanent form of quantitative easing 'for the people'. Unlike QE, it has built-in safeguards against inflation. The amount of money created would be determined by demographics — and only that: no person, committee, or organization would have any say in how much money would be created.
Because so much money (as currency) would be constantly entering the economy there would have to be a mechanism for returning money to the central bank. Businesses and individuals would retain plentiful pools of money, based on income, and no person or business would have any money collected before it could be used for purchases or investment. Basically, there would be a limit on how much money businesses could hoard. That is no price at all for those outcomes cited above for society. The idea would be for no individual ever, however rich or not, ever to have any money collected.
If interested, there is an article here in Medium for more general readership and another for, primarily, economists.