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Economics21st's avatar

"Money can discharge a debt and remain intact;"

But so can bank credit. If I go into a restaurant and order a meal and eat it, I'm in debt to the restaurant. I can discharge that debt at the end of the meal by writing a cheque or paying by debit card i.e. transferring bank credit from my account to the restaurant's. My debt to the restaurant is discharged, and the bank credit remains intact.

And money, as you define it, doesn't always remain intact when used to settle a debt. Suppose Barclays owes £1M to the Bank of England. It could transfer 100,000 old £10 notes to the BoE. The debt is discharged, and the money effectively no longer exists. (The BoE might just burn or shred them).

In general, if you pay someone with *their own* IOU, the debt is destroyed. If you pay someone with a third party's IOU, the debt remains outstanding: the third party now owes the payee instead of the payer.

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Calvin Perrins's avatar

Imagine if enough people put the bank of England on notice, asking them to prove that they 'loaned' their own funds to the treasury!...

Takhar v Gracefield Developments Ltd & Ors

‘fraud unravels all’

The case of Takhar v Gracefield Developments Ltd. holds significant importance as it confirms the Supreme Court’s consistent position of not allowing fraudsters from benefitting from their fraudulent activity and upholding public interest matter.

A person who obtained judgment through fraud had perpetrated a deception not only on their opponent but also on the rule of law and the court itself.

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