Mason asks: "Please define the ‘real-bills doctrine."
When a firm seeks credit, it writes bills of
exchange. They expire in 90 days, at which time
the bills can be redeemed for cash. A firm can
pay its suppliers with these bills, discounted,
or it can present them to a bank, discounted, in
exchange for cash in its demand deposit, used to
pay labor. These real bills provide a flexible
supply of money substitutes or credits for the needs of trade.
Fred Foldvary