In my last article, I introduced the topic of trust based credit...
or how to make money without money. In today's G'man dominated world,
only fringe economic activities like street vending of umbrellas escape
the all-smothering regulatory blanket. But imagine if the whole world
economy could run on 'trust based credit'... and escape the 'vampire
squid' actions of the Bankster and the G'man... impossible you say? Just
a pipe dream?
Well, the historic reality is that prior to the
madness of WWI... the 'War to End All Wars'... the world economy did
indeed run on such a credit system, with the reality check of 'trust
your neighbor but tie your camel' in full effect. So effective and
efficient was this system of credit, that world trade volume seen before
WWI was not matched till the nineteen seventies; almost three quarters
of a century later, despite huge growth in population and wealth.
To
fully understand the trust based credit system and the enormous and
deadly ramifications of its destruction during WWI, we need to
understand how the principles employed by the street vendor and umbrella
wholesaler apply in the whole world economy.
We all know what a
bill is; a paper record of what we purchase... in restaurants the bill
is called a check, in bars a tab... but the idea is always the same. We
buy some merchandise; a meal, an umbrella (in a retail store) or a pint
of brew, get presented with the bill or check or tab, verify the bill...
by confirming that what it claims we bought is true... then we accept
the bill, and pay it.
The only difference between a retail bill
and a commercial bill is the term; retail bills are COD... to be paid
immediately. Commercial bills are almost never COD, but give terms; time
to pay. Terms are like 30 days net, 60 days, 90 days etc. Thus, while a
retail bill is paid immediately, and is 'retired'... i.e. paid in full
and only kept for bookkeeping purposes... the commercial bill stays
'open' or in effect until the due date, when it is paid... and only then
retired.
A big trailer truck carrying 30,000 Liters of gasoline
backs up to the gas station, fills the underground storage tank... and
the driver heads to the gas station office to complete the paperwork.
Suppose gasoline costs $1 per Liter... do you imagine the station
attendant will pay $30,000 in cash? Not likely! Nor can the attendant
write a check... he simply signs (accepts) the bill or commercial
invoice. The invoice specifies that 30,000 L of gasoline have been
delivered, and that payment will be due in say 60 days from the signing
date.
Until paid in full, this bill represents value; the value of
the 30,000 L of gasoline delivered, and the value of the payment that
will be made in not more than 60 days. The holder of the bill, the
gasoline wholesaler, may simply hold the bill till it is paid... in his
'accounts receivable'... or may use it to pay the refinery that produced
the gasoline. If he does this, he will assign the bill to the refinery,
so that when the gasoline retailer makes payment, the payment will be
made to the refinery, not the wholesaler.
This is the crux of the
commercial credit system; goods are placed on consignment, a bill
written and accepted, and payment made as per the terms of the
contract... the bill. Notice credit is granted, goods change hands, but
there is no borrowing involved. No borrowing, no interest charges, no
collateral... simply trust that the retail gas station will indeed sell
the gasoline delivered, and use the proceeds of retail gas sales to pay
the bill when due. The bill thus created can circulate, that is clear
credit... make payments. Such a bill, one that circulates, is called a
Bill of Exchange.
Suppose the retail gas-bar makes a profit of 8%
on gasoline sales, and the prevailing interest rates are 4%...
reasonable enough assumptions under normal economic circumstances. The
retail gas-bar owner has three choices to fund inventory; use bank
credit i.e. borrow the funds; use his own capital; or work with 'trust
based' credit. Today, most retailers except fringe operations like
street vendors, and 'vertical' transactions within one industry like
petroleum products, have only the first two choices available to them.
To
make an 8% annualized profit, the gas bar owner will make a 2% profit
by re-selling the gasoline in ninety days; he then buys another batch of
30,000 L... makes another 2% profit in the next 90 days... and repeats
this four times a year. Four times 2% is 8%, the annualized profit. Now
consider this; if the interest rate is 4% per annum that translates to
1% per quarter... the 90 day period that the 30,000 L must be funded.
Isn't this incredible; net profit is 2%, and cost of interest is 1%...
half the profits go to pay the Bankster!
The second alternative is
to fund the purchase with cash, the retailer's own capital; this plays
up the 'you need money to make money' rule spread by the Bankster... and
yes, if the retailer has the cash, he can indeed fund the purchase...
but then he falls prey to opportunity costs. The cash invested in
gasoline inventory could have been invested in a bond that pays 4%
annual interest income; so, the retailer is still hit.
With
borrowed funds, he pays ½ his profit to the Bankster. With cash payment,
the retailer loses 1/3 of the profit he could have made using the third
option, trust based credit to fund the gasoline... and investing his
own capital in something else. If he makes 8% on gas sales, and 4% on
interest earned on his capital, that is a 12% per annum income on the
$30,000; not bad at all, is it?
Now we start to see the benefit of
'trust based credit'... cost of doing business drops drastically.
Indeed, there are many enterprises... and job opportunities... that
remain 'in potentia'; they never materialize because the cost of doing
business on a cash or borrowed funds basis is too high. These 'phantom'
enterprises actually did exist under Gold, when all retail business not
just the fringe ones took advantage of trust based credit. This is one
major reason there was no structural unemployment under the Classical
Gold Standard.
But really, we have just scratched the surface of
the magical benefits of 'trust based credit', often called the Bills of
Exchange system... or the Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith. The full
vertical and horizontal circulation of Bills, the international BiIl
market, the discount rate... these all depend on the free circulation of
Gold and Silver coin. Much G'man and Bankster effort goes into
suppressing Gold and Silver money, in order to suppress the Bill
market... and to keep the world economy hooked up to the 'vampire
squid'.
Once the Fiat paper regime collapses and real money makes
its comeback, circulation of Real Bills will again arise. Monetary
debasement will be replaced by constantly increasing purchasing power of
money. Structural unemployment and the dole will be replaced by full
employment. Financial speculation will be replaced by real wealth
generation.
Trust Your Neighbor - Tie Your Camel
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 1:26 AM
