Money backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing country as opposed to hard currency or gold. Most currencies in circulation today are credit money. Also called fiat money.
| Banking Dictionary: Credit Money |
Money backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing country as opposed to hard currency or gold. Most currencies in circulation today are credit money. Also called fiat money.
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| Wikipedia: Credit money |
Credit money is any claim against a physical or legal person that can be used for the purchase of goods and services.[1] Examples of credit money include personal IOUs, and in general any financial instrument or bank money market account certificate) which is not immediately repayable (redeemable) in specie, on demand.
Credit money is naturally used as money, and may even be the primary type of money. Banknotes which are not backed by specie, whether or not they are legal tender (see fiat money for the latter case), are credit money, inasmuch as they are simply promissory notes issued by a certain bank, or system of banks.
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An example of a credit money banknote which is not legal tender is seen in Scotland, where banknotes from a well-trusted bank function as currency. Scotland technically recognizes no legal tender, and thus functions nationally on private banknote credit money, which is represented by promissory Pound Sterling notes. These notes are issued by three major Scottish banks (among them the Bank of Scotland), however these banks must hold deposits with the Bank of England to cover the notes they issue. Bank of England notes are also not legal tender outside of England and Wales, however they are universally accepted in the rest of the UK, and legally are obligations of the Bank.
In the United States during the Great Depression, trust in banks dropped very low, and there was the risk of a bank run on a private or state-banks. In the United States, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created in 1933 to insure deposits in checking and savings accounts,[2] thus effectively making the federal government the final creditor for bank-drafts and promisory notes issued by all participating banks and credit unions.
In the case of legal-tender banknotes, the issuing bank is generally the central bank or reserve bank of a government, which, by authorizing the note as legal tender, assumes the role of creditor. For example, in the United States, paper currency consists of Federal Reserve notes, which are banknotes issued by the Federal Reserve system of privately owned central banks. These banknotes are liabilities of the Federal Reserve, and obligations of the United States.[3]
In terms of the money supply, credit money is generally associated with that part of M2 which is not M0.
Today many countries' central banks or financial regulators do not impose reserve requirements on banks, such as is the case in the United Kingdom. In this case, the textbook representation of fractional reserve banking becomes inapplicable. As Werner (2005) points out, this demonstrates that each bank has the power to create credit (and hence money); it is not a sequential process of banks lending their deposits, as textbooks say.[4]
Credit money is at least as old as banking, namely about 5,000 years. In ancient Babylon (3rd Millenium BC), temples often acted as banks. Banks have for centuries served as the main creators of the money supply. This also has given them powers to allocate credit. Prominent banking systems with flourishing credit money supplies include ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome.[5] During the Crusades in Europe, precious goods would be entrusted to the Roman Catholic Church's Knights Templar, who effectively created a system of modern credit accounts. Over time this system grew into the credit money that we know today[citation needed], where banks create money by approving loans - although the risk and reserve policies of each national central bank set a limit on this.
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