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In this post, we’ll break down the essential concepts of Chapter 3: Money and Credit, where you’ll learn how money evolved, how banks work, and the role of credit in the economy.
💰 I. What is Money?
Money is anything that is widely accepted as a medium of exchange.
It removes the need for barter (exchange of goods without money), which had many limitations.
🔄 Barter System Problems:
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Double coincidence of wants (both parties need to want what the other has)
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Lack of standard value
✅ Money solves this by acting as:
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Medium of exchange
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Store of value
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Unit of account
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Standard of deferred payment
🪙 II. Evolution of Money
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Barter System
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Commodity Money (grains, cattle)
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Metallic Money (coins)
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Paper Currency
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Digital Money (UPI, net banking)
In India, only RBI (Reserve Bank of India) can issue currency.
🏦 III. Modern Forms of Money
1. Currency (Cash)
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Notes and coins
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Guaranteed by the government of India and issued by RBI
2. Deposits in Banks
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People deposit money in banks for safety and interest
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These are demand deposits because people can withdraw anytime
💳 Cheque: Paper instruction to bank to pay a specific amount from your account
📱 Digital Transfers: NEFT, IMPS, UPI – new-age money
✅ Demand deposits are also money, as they can be used to make payments.
💼 IV. How Do Banks Work?
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Banks accept deposits and give interest to depositors
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Use a major portion of deposits to give loans to people and businesses
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Charge higher interest on loans than they give on deposits – this is how banks earn
Example:
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Deposit Interest = 3%
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Loan Interest = 10%
➡️ Bank’s profit = 7%
💸 V. Credit – What is It?
Credit is an agreement where a lender provides money or goods and the borrower agrees to repay later.
Credit = Loan
Can be taken from:
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Banks
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Cooperatives
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Moneylenders
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Friends/relatives
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Traders
📊 VI. Terms of Credit
Every loan has:
Term | Description |
---|---|
Collateral | Security against loan (land, house, etc.) |
Interest Rate | Extra amount to be paid on the loan |
Mode of Repayment | How and when to repay |
Documentation | Legal papers, identity proofs, etc. |
✅ Better terms = Easier, safer loans
⚖️ VII. Two Sides of Credit
A. Positive Effect (Helpful Credit)
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Borrower uses loan for productive purpose
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Earns profit, repays easily
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Example: Farmer takes loan to buy seeds, gets good harvest
B. Negative Effect (Debt Trap)
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Loan taken in emergency or due to crop failure
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Cannot repay → more borrowing → debt trap
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Example: Farmer with crop loss and high interest loan from moneylender
✅ Credit is useful only when used wisely
🌾 VIII. Formal and Informal Sources of Credit
Criteria | Formal Sector 🏦 | Informal Sector 🧓 |
---|---|---|
Examples | Banks, Cooperatives | Moneylenders, landlords, traders |
Regulation | By RBI and government | No regulation |
Interest Rate | Lower and fixed | Very high and unfair |
Legal protection | Yes | No protection |
📌 RBI supervises formal sources and sets guidelines like minimum balance, loan norms, etc.
⚠️ IX. Challenges in Rural Credit
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Rural poor often lack collateral
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Cannot access banks easily
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Depend on informal sources with high interest rates
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Leads to exploitation and poverty cycle
🎯 X. Need for Credit Reforms
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Expand financial inclusion (more people in banking system)
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Promote Self Help Groups (SHGs) and Microfinance
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Increase number of rural banks and cooperatives
📚 XI. Key Terms
Term | Meaning |
---|---|
Credit | Loan with future repayment |
Collateral | Asset used as security for loan |
Interest Rate | Extra charge on borrowed money |
Formal Sector | Registered, government-regulated lenders |
Informal Sector | Unregulated moneylenders |
📌 Summary Table
Topic | Highlights |
---|---|
Money | Medium of exchange |
Demand Deposits | Bank deposits withdrawable on demand |
Credit | Useful if used productively |
Formal vs Informal | Formal = safer, lower cost |
Credit Reforms Needed | To reduce poverty and exploitation |
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