Interest and Money: Difference between pages

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#The amount, usually expressed as an annual percentage of the principal, charged for borrowing money, or earned from a fixed income investment or from a floating interest rate investment.
Historically, and narrowly, money referred to cash (notes and coins) in official currency backed by the relevant government.
#Any difference between the terminal value and the present value of a borrowing or an investment, often expressed as a money amount (though it can also be expressed as a percentage).
 
Such money may be legal tender.
 
 
More generally, money is anything accepted for the settlement of debts in an economy or jurisdiction.
 
 
To the economist, money is whatever is used for four roles:
# Medium of exchange.
# Unit of account.
# Store of value.
# Standard for deferred payment.
 
 
''Fiat money.''
 
Money, then, can be many things, but most often today is ''fiat'' (let it be) money, i.e. tokens provided by a government and accepted by them for payment of taxes, or abstract representations of it. The latter are mostly as electronic representations in the accounts of banks and other monetary financial institutions, including [[central bank]]s. Most money in developed countries consists of these records rather than of the tokens issued as fiat money.
 
 
''Commodity money.''
 
In the past money has been commodity money, for example gold or silver or valuable spices or shells, the value of which is in the valuable material or object rather than a nominal value ascribed to (a portion of) it. A government can issue tokens (e.g. notes or coins) exchangeable for a fixed quantity of such a commodity. Such tokens are known as representative money.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Conventional year]]
* [[At the money]]
* [[Dual currency bond]]
* [[Barter]]
* [[Earnings]]
* [[Broad money]]
* [[Gross interest]]
* [[Call money]]
* [[Interest rate]]
* [[Cash]]
* [[Interest rate differential]]
* [[Central bank money]]
* [[Non-performing loan]]
* [[Commodity]]
* [[Paying agent]]
* [[Cryptocurrency]]
* [[Periodic]]
* [[Currency]]
* [[Present value]]
* [[e-money]]
* [[Principal]]
* [[Fiat money]]
* [[Self-financing loan]]
* [[Finance ]]
* [[Simple interest]]
* [[Financial stability]]
* [[Fungible]]
* [[Gold standard]]
* [[Hard money]]
* [[Helicopter money]]
* [[Hot money]]
* [[In the money]]
* [[International money market]]
* [[Legal tender]]
* [[Materialistic]]
* [[Mint]]
* [[Monetary]]
* [[Monetisation]]
* [[Money laundering]]
* [[Money management]]
* [[Money market]]
* [[Money market fund]]
* [[Money market instrument]]
* [[Money market lines]]
* [[Money market yield]]
* [[Money mule]]
* [[Money order]]
* [[Money purchase]]
* [[Money supply]]
* [[Money terms]]
* [[Narrow money]]
* [[Out of the money]]
* [[Overnight money]]
* [[Quantity theory of money]]
* [[Time value of money]]
* [[Time value of money]]
* [[Yield]]
* [[Token]]
* [[Value for money]]
 
 
== External link ==
[http://bankunderground.co.uk/2015/08/21/monies-joining-economic-and-legal-perspectives/ Bank Underground blog: Monies - Joining economic and legal perspectives]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 09:27, 29 April 2022

Historically, and narrowly, money referred to cash (notes and coins) in official currency backed by the relevant government.

Such money may be legal tender.


More generally, money is anything accepted for the settlement of debts in an economy or jurisdiction.


To the economist, money is whatever is used for four roles:

  1. Medium of exchange.
  2. Unit of account.
  3. Store of value.
  4. Standard for deferred payment.


Fiat money.

Money, then, can be many things, but most often today is fiat (let it be) money, i.e. tokens provided by a government and accepted by them for payment of taxes, or abstract representations of it. The latter are mostly as electronic representations in the accounts of banks and other monetary financial institutions, including central banks. Most money in developed countries consists of these records rather than of the tokens issued as fiat money.


Commodity money.

In the past money has been commodity money, for example gold or silver or valuable spices or shells, the value of which is in the valuable material or object rather than a nominal value ascribed to (a portion of) it. A government can issue tokens (e.g. notes or coins) exchangeable for a fixed quantity of such a commodity. Such tokens are known as representative money.


See also


External link

Bank Underground blog: Monies - Joining economic and legal perspectives