I don't think so, the bank will need to collateralize these debts somehow (ie: Lenders). The yield on CC debt is high.
For medical bills, that's a false and yet correct analogy. The hospital did, in theory, create money out of thin air (at least from an accounting perspective). In this case, it is the hospital (ie: The investor) who will go under if the patient does not pay her bill.
And that's fine. Investors are in it for yield which carries risk. This is different from putting money on an exchange or a bank. You are looking here for a store, unless you willingly signed up for some yield thing.
The bank created money because the borrower can use the money to settle other debts. When the creditor that the debtor repays with the credit card deposits those payments in bank accounts they become bank deposits in other banks.
The hospital patient cannot settle debts with his medical care that he received or deposit it in a bank.
For medical bills, that's a false and yet correct analogy. The hospital did, in theory, create money out of thin air (at least from an accounting perspective). In this case, it is the hospital (ie: The investor) who will go under if the patient does not pay her bill.
And that's fine. Investors are in it for yield which carries risk. This is different from putting money on an exchange or a bank. You are looking here for a store, unless you willingly signed up for some yield thing.