cthia wrote:First off, casinos are a closed system. A special case. Redemption is possible only at the casino and it is not an international form of currency.
The problem is that you aren't allowing for what is happening "behind the scenes" in bank transactions. Physical funds are always involved or banks can simply operate fraudulently by issuing their own credit chips. Only the Feds can do that. When these chips are purchased, physical funds will have to be moved, behind the scenes. The way I read it, they are appealing to slavers because there need not be a paper trail when using them. You simply need the PIN number.
Tlb, let me give you a more potent example. Let's say Hauptman decides to move to another system. Or, even better, let's say he becomes pissed off with his current bank (that's never happened to anyone), and decides he wants to withdraw all of his funds immediately. Well, surely he's not going to be foolish enough to try or risk physically carrying trillions of dollars out of the bank. Behind the scenes the bank is scurrying trying to gather trillions of dollars to send via armored vehicle to the bank of his choice.
An electronic credit chip could be the ticket. If he steps out of the bank and a pulser destroys the chip, who gets the trillions? If you say the bank, I can close my eyes and finger any bank with hit men waiting around the corner.
You are not considering that the Bank of Madrid is in essence a Federal Reserve Bank with the authority to produce money up to the limits of its reserve. And what would physical money look like in the future? Not paper or a metal disc, because that can be counterfeited; so something with a security protocol and a embedded amount that cannot be altered without destruction. I think you are confused because the Solarian currency is called a Credit, so you hear credit chip and think something like a credit card.
There is no need for a PIN with these things. Yes; if it is destroyed, then it cannot be redeemed; the same way that gold or silver certificates could not redeem gold or silver when destroyed. From the RFC quote earlier:
Each bank's credits are issued by that bank and backed by that bank's total reserves and deposits, and the League regulatory agencies with bank oversight are required to ensure that no bank issues a total number of credits in excess of its reserves and deposits. In the event that a bank should experience a failure anyway — as the result of a short-term run or for some other reason — the LDIA steps in to insure deposits and also to ensure that any legally issued credits of that institution will be honored. Obviously, the LDIA is legally required to maintain a fund which is huge in absolute terms although it is proportionately quite small in comparison to the overall League economy.