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A financial plan drawn up for an individual, a family, a business or a government. It is usually for a period of a month or a year. Done right it
should be able to tell you if you spend more than you earn and how much you can afford to spend.
Credit In the Red
Money to buy goods or services that the lender will require to be paid back in the
future.
Credit card
A card used to borrow money or pay for purchases. You get a limit you can spend up
to and you make repayments monthly. Remember! Credit cards do you not give you free money! Every penny you spend
has to be repaid!
Debit card
A card issued by a bank. Used in a similar way to credit cards, but the cash
comes straight out of your bank account.
Debt
Money owed to another person or business.
What you earn on money you keep in a bank account, or money you pay to
borrow.
Interest rate
The cost of borrowing money or what you’re paid by the bank when you save. For example Borrow £1,000 at 20% APR over a
year and you'll be charged £200 interest (20% of £1,000). Conversely it can be the money you earn when you save money.
Stands for annual percentage rate and it’s the official rate for borrowing over a year. It includes any fees you pay as well as the cost
of borrowing.
CompoundInterest
Compound interest is a key issue when it comes to saving and borrowing; in essence it’s the interest paid on interest. For
example:Suppose you had £100 in a savings account which paid 10% annual interest (if only!). After year one you'd have £100 plus £10 interest
(10% of £100), a total of £110. Yet after year two, you'd earn another £10 interest (the interest on the original £100), plus a further £1 of interest earned on the £10 interest from the first
year. So now you've a total of £121.By year three, you'd be earning interest on the interest from year
two, and interest on the interest on the interest from year one (gulp). And that's basically what compounding is all about.
Minimum Repayments
Unlike mortgages and loans, with credit cards you choose how much you pay back per month, the
more you pay the faster the debt clears. The only restriction is that there's always a prescribed minimum repayment; the lowest amount you must repay each month to avoid a fine. Rather
than a fixed amount, it is usually 2% or 3% of the outstanding debt, with a £5 minimum. However the danger with minimum repayments is that as
the amount of debt decreases so does the minimum repayment
Balance Transfer
A balance transfer is when one credit card repays debts on other credit or store cards;
so you now owe it the money instead, hopefully at a special cheap rate.
Loan
An agreement between a lender and a borrower. The borrower agrees to repay the
money borrowed over a period of time – with or without interest.
Overdraft £0.00
An arrangement with a bank which allows customers to withdraw more funds from a
current account than they have in the account. It is a form of lending.
Savings account
A bank account which pays interest. It is not designed as a day-to-day bank account.
A store card works like a credit card, but can only be used in the store that issued it.
Usually these types of cards have astronomically high interest and should be
avoided.