James C.W. Ahiakpor writes
> Credit, I would contend, is the facility to make a purchase without money
(cash or currency); it is thus a substitute for money.
But Munro has written
> Nightingale’s second proposition, also endorsed by most of these
historians, is that the wide variety of credit instruments used in
late-medieval England were not yet negotiable
Thus the forms of credit under discussion were not a substitute for cash
The erroneous eliding of a distinction between
A) having a line of credit with perhaps just one well established supplier,
and
B) having cash in your pocket and access to a competing range of potential
suppliers
seems to me, again, to have a whiff of mercantilism about it.
Rob Tye, York UK