Money Defined
Functions of Money
Money Amount & Through Time
Store Value & Money Supply
100

Money

Generally accepted for goods and services.

100

Medium of Exchange

Usable for buying and selling goods and services. 

100

Inflation

Occurs when the money supply grows to quickly.

100

Purchasing Power

Value function.

200

Currency

Standardized medium of exchange issued by the government.

200

Monetary Units

Used as a yardstick to measure the relative worth of a wide variety of goods, services, and resources.

200

Recession

If there is too little money.

200

Time value of money

Money received today it has a higher value the money received in the future.

300

Russian Ruble Crisis

People stopped using the official ruble in exchange for goods and services due to a lack of faith and more worthwhile forms of exchange, such as vodka.

300

Gauge

We can gauge the value of objects better with money.

300

Commodity money

Money that has some other use other than being a medium of exchange, a unit of account, and a store of value.

300

Compound Interest

Interests earned on the principal plus interest.

400

Legal Tender

Assets accepted for repayment of debt to the government, as well as private transactions, etc.

400

Money v Barter

Money allows society to escape the complications of barter.

400

Money Must be

Easily standardized so prices of two units can be compared, Divisible, Portable, Physically durable, Broadly in demand.

400

M1

The narrowest definition of the money supply is M1. It consists of two components: Currency in the hands of the public.

500

Dollarization

The situation in which market participants use another country’s currency as a means of exchange. (Like Costa Rica, which uses USD)

500

Specialization

Money enables society to gain the advantages of geographic and human specialization.

500

Cigarettes

Used by prisoners as currency.

500

M2

Currency and checkable deposits.

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