Interest
In finance, interest is a surcharge on the repayment of debt (borrowed money). The fact that lenders demand interest for loans in capitalist countries can be explained by one or more of the following:
- time preference
- the time value of money
- the opportunity cost of money
- macroeconomic price changes (inflation)
- the risk of default on the loan (bankruptcy)
- simple interest, in which outstanding balances grow linearly with time. In each period, the total balance grows by some fraction of the principal (that is, of the original investment).
- compound interest, in which outstanding balances grow geometrically with time and exponentially with time in the limit as the rate of compounding becomes instantaneous. In each period, the total balance grows by some fraction of the sum of the principal and the interest paid on all previous periods.
Simple interest is seldom used in practice. In most cases this is because the interest earned in previous periods is assumed to remain in the account. Only when the interest earned is immediately withdrawn from the account should simple interest be used. When interest is not collected as it is accrued (as with a certificate of deposit, where the payment is in a lump sum), the interest increases the amount of money subject to interest. In this case simple interest would not reflect the opportunity cost that the lender experiences. With compound interest, the frequency of compounding influences the total amount of interest paid over the life of the loan. An interesting note from mathematics is that the formula for calculating continuously compounded interest utilizes e, an important mathematical constant and the base of the natural logarithm, which is defined as follows:
Interest involves the future, which is uncertain. Some interest bearing investments are riskier than others. The greater the risk of the security, the more interest investors expect to receive.
Different parties will be offered different rates on debt obligations (such as loans). The measure of credit worthiness of an individual is called a credit rating or credit score. Other entities (such as governments and companies) will acquire a bond rating if they are active in bond markets.
The collection of interest was forbidden by Christian and other religions under laws of usury. This is still the case with Islam which results in a special type of Islamic banking. Gesell researched the destabilizing effect of interest (an asset will increase beyond any limit over time) in his Freiwirtschaft theory, which includes negative interest rates.
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