Credit Before Coin: How Markets Bootstrap Sound Money Economies
The conventional wisdom among sound money advocates runs something like this: first accumulate gold (or Bitcoin), then build an economy. But history suggests the sequence often ran backward. Lancashire built the Industrial Revolution on bills of exchange before it accumulated coin. Colonial America developed a sophisticated commercial economy while chronically drained of specie. Medieval Italian merchants created the most advanced financial system in Europe precisely because gold and silver were scarce relative to trade volumes. The credit came first; the base money followed.
This pattern reveals something important about elastic credit under sound money. A fixed monetary base creates friction when liquidity needs fluctuate. A merchant who has shipped goods and awaits payment has created value but holds no money. He could wait, but waiting has costs. Time preference is universal: present goods are worth more than future goods.
Before central banks existed, markets developed a solution. The merchant drew a bill of exchange on his buyer, ordering payment of a specified sum on a specified future date. This bill could circulate. Sellers drew on buyers; investors purchased the bills at a discount; and the credit layer swelled to accommodate commercial activity. The investor gave up present money, received a claim on the buyer’s future payment, and the bill traded at a discount reflecting time preference and risk, exactly as praxeological theory predicts.
The critical point is that time preferences were transferred, preserved as a claim on future production with aggregate purchasing power in the economy unchanged. When the bill matured, the buyer paid the holder, and the bill extinguished itself. The system was self-liquidating.
Consider Lancashire in the late eighteenth century. The cotton industry was transforming England, but the industrial north faced a peculiar problem: chronic shortage of coin and banks too few to issue notes. Henry Thornton observed in 1802 that “Liverpool and Manchester effect the whole of their larger mercantile payments not by country bank notes, of which none are issued by the banks, but by bills at one or two months due.” The region that launched the Industrial Revolution ran on trade credit.
What made this system remarkable was that it economized on scarce coin and drew money into the region. Bills circulated freely; anyone with surplus funds could purchase them, paying coin or banknotes to acquire a claim on future payment. Banks also rediscounted bills, converting raw commercial credit into fungible banknotes that circulated more easily. Lancashire produced cotton textiles; those textiles were exported; and through this commerce, money flowed back to the industrial north. The bills enabled production that generated the revenues to retire them. Far from being inflationary, the system was self-liquidating and self-enriching.
Colonial America exhibited the same pattern. Perpetually drained of specie by mercantilist policies, the colonists developed extensive credit networks to economize on scarce money. Three-party settlements were common: if A owed B and B owed C, B would direct A to pay C directly. The productive output of the colonies, tobacco and timber and furs shipped to the Caribbean and Europe, brought Spanish dollars flowing back over decades. By 1774, approximately three-quarters of the colonial money supply consisted of specie accumulated through persistent trade surpluses built on credit.
These examples reveal a two-layer monetary architecture: an inelastic base of hard money and an elastic layer of credit instruments that expands and contracts with the needs of trade. The layers remained distinct because bills were claims on future money, and they traded at a discount that made this explicit. When a merchant accepted a bill for 98 pounds against a face value of 100 pounds due in sixty days, he understood he was exchanging present goods for future payment minus interest. The discount was the price of time made visible.
This distinction enabled automatic regulation of the credit layer without any central authority. When commerce expanded, whether due to seasonal harvest cycles, new trade routes, or general prosperity, more bills entered circulation. Discount rates moved accordingly: when bills were scarce relative to investors, discounts narrowed; when bills were plentiful, discounts widened, raising effective interest rates, discouraging marginal borrowers, and throttling new issuance. Throughout these fluctuations, the monetary base remained untouched. Commerce breathed through price signals alone, requiring no central bank to manage the money supply because only the credit layer fluctuated, and it regulated itself automatically.
The essential requirement is that credit must be backed by real, exportable production. Bills drawn on anticipated output of goods that can be sold externally are genuinely self-liquidating because export revenues settle them on schedule. Bills drawn to finance consumption or speculation create obligations without the means to discharge them. The market institution worked because merchants understood this distinction and because each endorser of a circulating bill added his own liability, creating strong incentives against drawing or accepting dubious paper.
The implications for sound money advocates are significant. Bitcoin maximalists sometimes imagine that adoption requires first accumulating sufficient Bitcoin to run an economy, as if the monetary base must precede commercial development. The historical pattern suggests the opposite sequence is possible. A community with productive capacity but scarce base money can use credit instruments internally, export goods and services for Bitcoin, and accumulate the monetary base through trade surpluses. The bills enable the production that earns the coin.
Credit, then, can exist without money creation, and elasticity can exist without central banks. Lancashire’s cotton magnates knew something that modern monetary theorists have lost: you build an economy on credit that honestly represents future production, and the coin follows. Their bills of exchange system enabled cashless payments across Europe for centuries. The sequence is commerce then coin, mediated by credit instruments that transfer time preferences and preserve purchasing power. A Bitcoin economy need not wait until sufficient coins have been accumulated. Productive communities can bootstrap themselves into sound money through the honest representation of future claims, just as Lancashire bootstrapped itself into industrial dominance on nothing but bills of exchange and exportable cloth.
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