Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part one Analytical and Historical Foundations
- Part two Debating Monetary Theory under Inconvertibility
- 5 New Reality
- 6 The Early Round of the Bullion Debate 1800–1802
- 7 Thornton on Inconvertibility and Central Banking
- 8 Ricardo versus Bosanquet
- 9 “Credit Theories of Money” in Exchange and Intermediation
- Part three Debating
- Part four The Road to Defensive Central Banking
- Part five A New Beginning
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Subject Index
9 - “Credit Theories of Money” in Exchange and Intermediation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part one Analytical and Historical Foundations
- Part two Debating Monetary Theory under Inconvertibility
- 5 New Reality
- 6 The Early Round of the Bullion Debate 1800–1802
- 7 Thornton on Inconvertibility and Central Banking
- 8 Ricardo versus Bosanquet
- 9 “Credit Theories of Money” in Exchange and Intermediation
- Part three Debating
- Part four The Road to Defensive Central Banking
- Part five A New Beginning
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Introduction
In Chapter 4, we presented a framework for analysis that falls within what we have called, after Schumpeter, “monetary theories of credit”; we addressed these theories mainly to the exchange process. In this chapter, we present an extension of the framework that moves beyond just “monetary theories of credit” to present “credit theories of money,” again after Schumpeter. We will present these theories in the contexts of both the exchange process and intermediation.
The understanding that exchange can be executed by debts and credits in the formulations defined in Chapter 4 – Private Debt Certificates (PDCs) – had to wait for Henry Thornton, and then one hundred years later, for Knut Wicksell. Analytically, this unconventional approach came into some conflict with the Quantity Theory. The quantities of the mediums used in payments were demand-determined. Thus, in this later approach, one faced the endogenous determination of credit in its role in the exchange process. The role of money in a pure credit economy will be discussed in the chapter on Wicksell.
The following discussion represents an attempt to invert the customary logical order of analysis that we covered in Chapter 4, and which was used by almost all scholars. We will describe and analyze a pure Accounting System of Exchange (ASE): a system of exchange based on the transfer of abstract social units of purchasing power, known also as a pure credit system in Wicksell’s terminology (see Chapter 17). We will first discuss the possible existence and meaning of other forms of payments, from “near-credits” to “money,” in an economy with such a pure credit system. Thus, money will be defined in terms of credit, and a credit theory of money will be developed. The main drawback of this approach, which may also be its main advantage, is that it takes as its departure point not a real-payments system, but an abstract, ideal one.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Monetary Theory and Policy from Hume and Smith to WicksellMoney, Credit, and the Economy, pp. 152 - 170Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010