83. What Credit means. It is
very important for those who would learn political
economy to understand exactly what is meant by credit.
John is said to give credit to Thomas when John leaves
some of his property in the use of Thomas, expecting
to have it returned at a future time. In short,
any one who lends a thing gives credit, and he who
borrows it receives credit. The word credit
means belief, and John believes that he will get
back his property from Thomas, though this, unfortunately,
does not always prove to be the case. John is
called the creditor, and Thomas the debtor.
It is not common, indeed, to speak
of credit in the case of most articles: when
a man borrows a horse, a book, a house, an engine,
or other common article, and pays for its use, he
is said to hire it, and what he pays for the use
is called the hire, fare, or rent. In some countries,
where coins are not yet used, people lend and borrow
corn, oil, wine, rice, or any common commodity which
all like to possess. In the parts of Africa where
palm oil is produced in great quantities, people give
and take credit in oil. But in all civilised countries
it has become the practice to borrow and lend money.
If a man needs an engine, and has nothing to buy it
with, he goes and borrows money enough from the person
who will lend it on the lowest terms, and then he buys
the engine where he can get it most cheaply. Frequently,
indeed, the man who sells the engine will give credit
for its price, that is, will lend the sum of money
to the buyer, just sufficient to enable him to buy
it.
Credit is a very important thing,
because, when properly employed, it enables property
to be put into the hands of those who will make the
best use of it. Many people have property but
are unable to go into business, as is the case with
women, children, old men, invalids, &c. Rich
people perhaps have so much property that they do not
care to trouble themselves with business, if they
can get others to take the trouble for them.
Even those who are engaged in business often have sums
of money which they do not immediately want to use,
and which they are willing to lend for a short time.
On the other hand, there are many clever active men,
who could do a great deal of work in establishing
manufactories, sinking mines, or trading in goods,
if they only had enough money to enable them to buy
the requisite materials, tools, buildings, land, &c.
A man must have some property of his own before he
can expect to get credit; but with some property to
fall back upon in case of need, and with a good character
for honesty and ability, a trader can by credit obtain
other people’s capital to deal with.
84. Loans on Mortgage. Credit
is given in many different ways; sometimes a man is
assisted by a permanent loan from a relative or friend
who has confidence in him. Enormous sums of money
are lent, as it is called, upon mortgage. A
man, for instance, who has built a cotton mill with
his own money, pledges the mill as security for a loan,
that is, he gives his creditor a right to sell the
mill unless the debt is paid when required. The mill
is called a mortgage or dead pledge, because it becomes
dead to the former owner, if he breaks the conditions
of the loan. There are many institutions, such
as insurance companies, building societies, &c., which
have a great deal of capital to lend on mortgage,
and many rich people invest their money in the same
way. Thus a very large part of the houses, land,
factories, shops, &c., are not really owned by the
people who seem to own them, but by mortgagees,
who have lent money on them.
Generally speaking, the interest paid
for such loans is 4-1/2 or 5 per cent. per annum,
when the security is quite good, that is, when the
property mortgaged is sure to sell for more than is
lent upon it. A considerable margin is always
left to cover mistakes or alterations as regards the
value of the property; thus, if a house be said to
be worth L1000, it will usually be security only for
a debt of L700 or L800. When the security is
not so good, because the ownership or the value of
the property mortgaged is doubtful, the rate of interest
charged will be higher, and may be six, seven, or
more per cent. The surplus covers the risk, that
is, compensates the lender, for the chance of losing
what he lends. Mortgage loans are generally made
upon fixed capital like houses, mills, ships, &c.,
which last a long time; but sometimes stocks of goods,
such as cotton, wine, corn, &c., are mortgaged as security
for temporary loans.
85. Banking. A large part of
the credit given, in a civilised country, is given
by bankers, who may be said to deal in credit, or
which comes to the same thing, in debt. A banker
usually carries on three or four different kinds of
work, but his proper work is that of borrowing from
persons who have ready money to lend, and lending it
to those who want to buy goods. As a shopkeeper
sells his stock of goods, he receives money for it.
And, until he buys a new stock, he has no immediate
need of this money. Those, again, who receive
salaries, dividends, rents, or other payments once
a quarter, do not usually want to spend the whole at
once. Instead of keeping such money in a house,
where it pays no interest and is liable to be stolen,
lost, or burnt, it is much better to deposit it with
a banker, that is, to lend it to a banker who will
undertake to pay it back when it is wanted. Generally
speaking a merchant, manufacturer, or tradesman sends
to his banker every day the money which he has received,
and only keeps a few pounds to give change or make
petty payments. The advantages of thus depositing
money with the banker are chiefly as follows:
(1.) The money is safe, as the banker
provides strong rooms, locked and guarded at night.
(2.) It is easy to pay the money away
by means of cheques or written orders entitling the
persons named therein to demand a specified sum of
money from the banker.
(3.) The banker usually allows some
interest for the money in his care.
Bankers receive deposits on various
terms; sometimes the depositor engages to give seven
days’ notice before withdrawing his deposit;
in other cases the money is lent to the banker for
one, three, or six months certain, and the longer
the time for which it is lent the better the rate
of interest the banker can usually give. But a
great deal of money is deposited on current account,
that is, the customer puts his money into the bank,
and draws it out just when he likes, without notice.
In this case the banker gives very little interest,
or none at all, because he has to keep much of the
money ready for his customers, not knowing when it
will be wanted.
Nevertheless, while some depositors
are drawing their money out, others will be putting
more in, and it is exceedingly unlikely that all the
thousands of customers of a large bank will want their
deposits at the same time. Thus it happens that
the banker, in addition to his own capital, has a
large stock of money always on hand, and he makes profit
by lending out this money to other customers, who need
credit.
There are various ways in which a
banker arranges his loans; sometimes he lends upon
the mortgage of goods, houses, and other property,
or of shares in railways and government funds, in
the way described; but this is not a proper way for
a banker to employ much of his funds, because he may
not be able to get back such loans rapidly enough when
he needs them. One of the simplest ways of lending
money is to allow customers to overdraw their accounts,
that is, to draw more money out of the bank than they
have put in. But a banker naturally takes care
not to allow overdrafts unless he has great confidence
in his customer, or has received a guarantee of repayment
from him or his friends.
86. Discount of Bills. The
most common and proper way in which a banker gives
credit and employs his funds is in the discount of
bills, that is, in advancing money in exchange for
a definite promise to pay it back at a stated time.
Suppose that John Smith has sold a thousand pounds
worth of cotton goods to Thomas Jones, a shopkeeper;
several months will pass perhaps before Jones can
sell the goods over the counter, and if he has not
much capital, he agrees that John Smith shall give
credit for the thousand pounds but in the mean time
draw a bill upon Jones. This bill would very
likely be somewhat in this form
LONDON, 1st February,
1878.
L1000, 0d.
Three months after date pay to me
or my order the sum of one thousand
pounds, value received.
JOHN SMITH.
To Mr. Thomas Jones.
John Smith is said to be the #drawer#
of the bill; Thomas Jones is the #drawee#, and the
bill amounts to a claim on the part of John Smith that
Thomas Jones owes him the sum named. If the drawee
acknowledges that this is the case, he signifies it
when the bill is presented to him, by writing on the
back the word “accepted,” together with
his name.
Now if the drawer and drawee of a
bill are persons of good credit, a banker will readily
discount such a bill, that is, buy it up for the sum
due, after subtracting interest at the rate of say
five per cent. per annum for the length of time the
bill has to run. The bill forms good security,
because, when accepted, John Smith is bound to pay
the thousand pounds when due, and if he fails, the
drawee is liable. Such bills are often bought
by one person after another, being endorsed by each
to the next, that is, impressed with an order that
the money shall be paid to the next person named.
When due the last owner must claim the money from
John Smith, and if he refuses to pay, each owner has
a claim upon the previous owners.