Wilhelm Lautenbach’s credit mechanics – a precursor to the current money supply debate

Decker, F. & Goodhart, C. A. E. (2022). Wilhelm Lautenbach’s credit mechanics – a precursor to the current money supply debate. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 29(2), 246-270. https://doi.org/10.1080/09672567.2021.1963796
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This article assesses the theory of credit mechanics within the context of the current money supply debate. Credit mechanics and related approaches were developed by a group of German monetary economists during the 1920s-1960s. Credit mechanics overcomes a one-sided, bank-centric view of money creation, which is often encountered in monetary theory. We show that the money supply is influenced by the interplay of loan creation and repayment rates; the relative share of credit volume neutral debtor-to-debtor and creditor-to-creditor payments; the availability of loan security; and the behaviour of non-banks and non-borrowing bank creditors. With the standard textbook models of money creation now discredited, we argue that a more general approach to money supply theory involving credit mechanics needs to be re-established.

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