Credit is a method of selling goods or services
without the buyer having cash in hand. A credit card is only
an automatic way of offering credit to a consumer. Today, every
credit card carries an identifying number that speeds shopping
transactions. Imagine what a credit purchase would be like
without it, the sales person would have to record your identity,
billing address, and terms of repayment.
According to Encyclopedia Britannica, "the use of credit
cards originated in the United States during the 1920s, when
individual firms, such as oil companies and hotel chains,
began issuing them to customers." However, references
to credit cards have been made as far back as 1890 in Europe.
Early credit cards involved sales directly between the merchant
offering the credit and credit card, and that merchant's
customer. Around 1938, companies started to accept each other's
cards. Today, credit cards allow you to make purchases with
countless third parties.
Credit Cards in different shapes
Credit cards were not always been made of plastic. There have
been credit tokens made from metal coins, metal plates, and
celluloid, metal, fiber, paper, and now mostly plastic cards.
First Credit Cards
The inventor of the first bank issued credit card was John
Biggins of the Flatbush National Bank of Brooklyn in New York.
In 1946, Biggins invented the "Charge-It" program
between bank customers and local merchants. Merchants could
deposit sales slips into the bank and the bank billed the customer
who used the card.