What is Credit and How it Works
Credit
- a word used quite often in our financial conversations, in some form or the
other. Every time you thought about borrowing some money from a friend or
taking a loan from the bank - you were actually thinking about credit.
So
what exactly is credit and how does it work? Let’s find out.
Investopedia
defines credit as ‘a contractual agreement in
which a borrower receives something of value now and agrees to repay the lender
at a later date—generally with interest.’
So,
when you (borrower) take a loan from a bank (lender), you agree to repay the
loan amount within a stipulated time with interest. This is credit as we
understand it in our daily lives.
Credit
can also mean credit cards, credit reports, credit histories or credit scores
in certain cases. Credit is also used when an individual receives money in cash
or in his or her bank account. So a credit transaction like salary in your bank
statement means that you have received money from a person or an organization.
How Credit Works?
In
the case of a borrower and a lender, the borrower ‘buys credit’ from the
lender. The most common way of buying credit happens when you use a credit
card. You purchase products on credit when you pay for them with your credit
card. The bank (lender) pays the merchant on your behalf at that instant and
you repay the bank at a later date as mutually agreed upon.
Following
healthy credit habits like paying the bills in full and on time (in case of
credit cards) help improve your credit worthiness to other financial
institutions.
Comments
Post a Comment