So we know that the general gist of the way things work, on Earth at least, is that you are provided with a place to live, supplies and food, and you don't have to do anything in return because fusion and replication have made that so "cheap". Raffi is doing this when we meet her in Picard. But what if Raffi decides to she wants to own a vineyard like Picard? How does she get there?
I think that the "Federation credit" rather than being a traditional currency is actually more closely related to another definition of credit "public acknowledgement". All your "in public" interactions and exchange of goods and services are given a value. The more stuff you do the more credit you receive for contributing to society. You could probably anonymize the actual data after the "point of sale" so only your points are recorded and not your actual activities, if that makes you uncomfortable. They know someone bought a bagel, but they don't know who, and you got 5 credits but the two aren't connected in the system.
So a very smart computer program has figured out how to weigh what various jobs "pay" based on actual difficulty/danger/necessity rather than pure worker supply and demand, and that's your "paycheck". Supply and Demand are accounted for, however. If you are a popular artist then you get lots of credit for everyone interacting with your art and seeing your shows. And transferring some of their social credit to you if they want to bring one home (because we have to control for finite resources somehow). But remember, just the act of "buying something" generates some new interaction credit for the buyer. If your job doesn't involve a consumer your "base pay" would be higher (someone has to monitor the fusion reactor). Stay at home parents get credit, because that's a difficult job too.
If you wanted to use an anonymous medium of exchange you could, (Latinum in the 24th Century) but you wouldn't get credit for it.
So you've got a job and built up some credit, and you put in a request for larger housing/different location. This goes into a central database where you can see all available empty places in your bracket, first come, first serve (wait-lists, examination periods needed ect). You "spend" your credits to move. Building a new place somewhere uninhabited (not in a nature preserve) is also an option. Starfleet Officers end up banking their credit, because their job is so dangerous and demanding, so they have lots to use when they retire, and can get a really nice place. You can pass property down through families without using credit.
I'm sure there's stuff I haven't accounted for, but I wanted to get this written down. critiques welcome.
I think that the "Federation credit" rather than being a traditional currency is actually more closely related to another definition of credit "public acknowledgement". All your "in public" interactions and exchange of goods and services are given a value. The more stuff you do the more credit you receive for contributing to society. You could probably anonymize the actual data after the "point of sale" so only your points are recorded and not your actual activities, if that makes you uncomfortable. They know someone bought a bagel, but they don't know who, and you got 5 credits but the two aren't connected in the system.
So a very smart computer program has figured out how to weigh what various jobs "pay" based on actual difficulty/danger/necessity rather than pure worker supply and demand, and that's your "paycheck". Supply and Demand are accounted for, however. If you are a popular artist then you get lots of credit for everyone interacting with your art and seeing your shows. And transferring some of their social credit to you if they want to bring one home (because we have to control for finite resources somehow). But remember, just the act of "buying something" generates some new interaction credit for the buyer. If your job doesn't involve a consumer your "base pay" would be higher (someone has to monitor the fusion reactor). Stay at home parents get credit, because that's a difficult job too.
If you wanted to use an anonymous medium of exchange you could, (Latinum in the 24th Century) but you wouldn't get credit for it.
So you've got a job and built up some credit, and you put in a request for larger housing/different location. This goes into a central database where you can see all available empty places in your bracket, first come, first serve (wait-lists, examination periods needed ect). You "spend" your credits to move. Building a new place somewhere uninhabited (not in a nature preserve) is also an option. Starfleet Officers end up banking their credit, because their job is so dangerous and demanding, so they have lots to use when they retire, and can get a really nice place. You can pass property down through families without using credit.
I'm sure there's stuff I haven't accounted for, but I wanted to get this written down. critiques welcome.