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Credit money is any
claim against a physical or legal person that can
be used for the purchase of goods and services[5].
Credit money differs from commodity and fiat money
in two ways: It is not payable on demand (although
in the case of fiat money, "demand payment" is a
purely symbolic act since all that can be demanded
is other types of fiat currency) and there is some
element of risk that the real value upon
fulfillment of the claim will not be equal to real
value expected at the time of purchase[5].
This risk comes about in two ways and affects both
buyer and seller.
First it is a claim and the claimant may default
(not pay). High levels of default have destructive
supply side effects. If manufacturers and service
providers do not receive payment for the goods
they produce, they will not have the resources to
buy the labor and materials needed to produce new
goods and services. This reduces supply, increases
prices and raises unemployment, possibly
triggering a period of stagflation. In extreme
cases, widespread defaults can cause a lack of
confidence in lending institutions and lead to
economic depression. For example, abuse of credit
arrangements is considered one of the significant
causes of the Great Depression of the 1930s.[9]
The second source of risk is time. Credit money is
a promise of future payment. If the interest rate
on the claim fails to compensate for the combined
impact of the inflation (or deflation) rate and
the time value of money, the seller will receive
less real value than anticipated. If the interest
rate on the claim overcompensates, the buyer will
pay more than expected.
Over the last two centuries, credit money has
steadily risen as the main source of money
creation, progressively replacing first commodity
and then representative money. In many cases
credit money has been converted to fiat money (see
below), as governments have backed certain private
credit instruments (first banknotes from central
banks, then later certain types of deposits to
banks), thus converting central banknotes to legal
tender, and other types of notes (deposit
certificates of less than a certain value) to a
status not very different from fiat money, since
they are backed by the power of the central
government to redeem eventually with tax
collection.
A particular problem with credit money is that its
supply moves in line with credit/business cycles
(colloquially: "booms" and "busts"). When lenders
are optimistic (notably when the debt level is
low), they increase their lending activity, thus
creating new money. This may also trigger
inflation and bull markets. When creditors are
pessimistic (for instance, when debt level is
perceived as too high, or unwise lending activity
in the past has resulted in situations where
defaults are expected to follow), then creditors
reduce their lending activity and money becomes
"tight" or "illiquid." Bankruptcies and market
recessions (so-called bear markets) then follow. |
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EXPERT
ADVICE |
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Customer
Dis Service
by Don Sutton
Dealing with customer service people is like tryng
to pick up water... no, sulfuric acid. |
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Taking
Home Stock
by Linda Leatherdale
Housing market good as stock markets soar. |
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|
Customer
Dis Service
by Don Sutton
Dealing with customer service people is like tryng
to pick up water... no, sulfuric acid. |
|
Taking
Home Stock
by Linda Leatherdale
Housing market good as stock markets soar. |
|
|
|
|