Most businesses begin the year with about $1000 in their cash accounts, execute lots of transactions in the year, and end the year with about $1000.   If they are profitable the excess goes into interest bearing accounts. 

It is logically unnecessary, and very inefficient, to send all of our transactions through banks. 

Individuals and small businesses could easily bill each other by creating receivables and payables, and allow a competitive market of settlement providers to net and offset our mutual balances on the internet.  This can be purely an information process:

This can be accomplished purely as a matter of contractual netting, i.e. you agree to give up your receivables in exchange for having a bunch of your bills paid in the same total amount, and to maintain the difference that's leftover in either direction, when it's over.  Anytime you like, you could pay (or receive) this residual net amount from guess who!  One of the same people who owed it to you, or who you owed, to begin with.   

Now for a more concrete example:

BALANCE SHEETS, BEFORE NETTING:

Company A  
Receivables  
From B 100
From C 60
   Total 160
 
Company B  
Receivables  
From C 70
From D 100
   Total 170
 
Company C  
Receivables  
From D 80
   
   Total 80
 
Company D  
Receivables  
From A 200
    
   Total 200
Payables  
To D -200
   
 
Payables  
To A -100
   
 
Payables  
To A -60
To B -70
 
Payables  
To B -100
To C -80
   Total -200
     Net -40
 
   Total -100
     Net 70
 
   Total -130
     Net -50
 
   Total -180
     Net 20

 
Let us suppose the ARAP cloud in this case is eBAY, and the four companies are in the habit of posting their bills on EBAY with aliases.  (I'm skipping a lot but each of their B2B commerce messages such as POs and invoices, lists one of their aliases instead of their bank/ACH number.) 

Let's  suppose the settlement agents are clever fellows and can maintain a 3-column table and match debtors with creditors.  Let's say they are even clever enough to aggregate and swap payables and receivables among themselves.  They might maintain mutual balances between each other or offload particular balances directly to the Companies in the market.  In this case let's assume there are four different SAs who happen to know these particular companies and advertise on their website or eBAY as clearing agents or market makers for paper issued by/against lists of aliases which they (secretly) know are Company A,B,C and D. 

BALANCE SHEETS, AFTER NETTING:

Company A  
Receivables  
   
   
   Total 0
 
Company B  
Receivables  
From SA-32 70
   
   Total 70
 
Company C  
Receivables  
   
   
   Total 0
 
Company D  
Receivables  
From SA-9 20
    
   Total 20
Payables  
To SA-73 -40
   
 
Payables  
   
   
 
Payables  
To SA-87 -50
   
 
Payables  
   
     
   Total -40
     Net -40
 
   Total 0
     Net 70
 
   Total -50
     Net -50
 
   Total 0
     Net 20

The settlement agents might be banks, finance companies, merchant account providers, etc. or may be the companies themselves, with respect to one or another of their own customers and suppliers in some cases.  Liquidity may be initially provided within this system by prepaying of suppliers for goods or services, for example. )   Bottom line, this market will be very competitive indeed, and fees will be extremely low since all these Companies already knew each other in the first place and the act of netting will dispose of their payable and receivables in equal amounts, with finality.  There is no likelihood any company will agree to pay any liability that isn't already on their books as an account payable, any more than they pay fake bills from the postal mailbox.  This is why it's fundamentally different from today's "bank" economy.  The settlement agents don't assume risk. Nobody assumes anything.  The Companies either accept the netting proposal from the settlement agent or they decline it.