Yeah, you’d have to prove that the costs are somehow shifted. That’s not at all clear. A dollar in accounts receivable is something of a legal fiction. It exists on a probability distribution according to how likely it is that the debt is going to be collected. Before credit cards, it was standard practice for businesses to “age” their AR over the course of months, ultimately writing off the most intractable debts. In many ways, that’s all that’s going on here. Credit cards are simply a way for businesses to sell their AR (at a modest discount). Interest rates partially offset this, but only to a point. If $200,000 isn’t collectable neither is $2,000,000 - interest theater, if you will.
Yeah, you’d have to prove that the costs are somehow shifted. That’s not at all clear. A dollar in accounts receivable is something of a legal fiction. It exists on a probability distribution according to how likely it is that the debt is going to be collected. Before credit cards, it was standard practice for businesses to “age” their AR over the course of months, ultimately writing off the most intractable debts. In many ways, that’s all that’s going on here. Credit cards are simply a way for businesses to sell their AR (at a modest discount). Interest rates partially offset this, but only to a point. If $200,000 isn’t collectable neither is $2,000,000 - interest theater, if you will.