A. Personal finance
Sometimes
in a shop they ask you: ‘How do you want to pay?’
You can
answer: ‘Cash / By cheque / By credit card.’
In a bank you usually have a current account, which is one where you
pay in your salary and then withdraw
money to pay your everyday bills. The bank sends you a regular bank statement telling you how much is
in your account. You may also have a savings
account where you deposit any extra money that you have and only take money out when you want to spend it on something special. You usually try to avoid having an overdraft or you end up paying a lot of
interest. If your account is overdrawn, you can be said to be in the red (as opposed to in the black or in credit).
Sometimes
the bank may lend you money – this
is called a bank loan. If the bank
(or building society) lends you
money to buy a house, that money is called a mortgage.
When you buy (or, more formally, purchase) something in a shop, you usually pay for it outright but sometimes you buy on credit. Sometimes you may be offered a discount or a reduction on something you buy at a shop. This means that you get, say, E10 off perhaps because you are a student. You are often offered a discount if you buy in bulk. It is not usual to haggle about prices in a British shop, as it is in, say a Turkish market. If you want to return something which you have bought to a shop, you may be given a refund, i.e. your money will be returned, provided you have a receipt.
The money
that you pay for services, e.g. to a school or a lawyer, is usually called a fee or fees; the money paid for a
journey is a fare.
If you buy
something that you feel was very good
value; it’s a bargain. If you
feel that it is definitely not worth
what you paid for it, when you call it a rip-off
(very colloquial).
B. Public
finance
The
government collects money from citizens through taxes. Income tax is the
tax collected on wages and salaries. Inheritance tax is collected on what people inherit from others. Customs or excise duties have to be paid on goods imported from other
countries. VAT or value added tax is a tax paid on most
goods and services when they are bought or purchased. Companies pay corporation tax on their profits. If you pay too much tax, you should be given some money back, a tax rebate.
The
government also sometimes pays out money to people in need, e.g. unemployment benefit (also known
informally as the dole) disability
allowances and student grants (to
help pay for studying). Recipients draw
a pension / unemployment benefit or are on the dole or on social security.
Every
country has its own special currency.
Every day the rates of exchange are
published and you can discover, for example, how many dollars there are
currently to the pound sterling.
A company
may sell shares to members of the
public who are then said to have invested
in that company. They should be paid a regular dividend or their investment,
depending on the profit or loss made by the company.
Answer the following money quiz.
1.
What currencies
are used in Japan, Australia, India and Russia?
2.
What does the
expression, ‘hard currency’ mean?
3.
Name two credit
cards which are usable world-wide.
4.
Give two
examples of imports that most countries impose customs duties on.
5.
Give three
examples of kinds of income that would be classed as unearned.
6.
What is the Dow
Jones index and what are its equivalents in London and Japan?
7.
Give an example
of something that is priceless and something that is valueless.
8.
Name the coins
and banknotes used in your country and one other country.
Match the words on the left with their definitions on
the right.
1.
Interest a
bank account with minus money in it
2.
Mortgage money
paid towards the cost of raising in family
3.
Overdrawn
account money
given by the government for education, welfare, etc.
4.
Savings account an account
that is used mainly for keeping money
5.
Current account money paid to people after a
certain age
6.
Pension an
account that cheques are drawn on for day-to-day use
7.
Disability
allowance money
chargeable on a loan
8.
Child benefit money
paid to people with a handicap
9.
Grant a
loan to purchase property
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