What Is It?
Why Trust the Paper?
This piece of paper is called fiat currency. The word "fiat" means "let it be done." Your government says this paper is money, so shops must take it. We do not need to dig for metal anymore. Instead, we trust that our leaders will keep the supply steady.
How It Works in Real Life
When you buy a toy, you give the store your cash. The store gives it to the bank. The bank trusts the government. If too many people print paper at once, it becomes less valuable (like when grandma makes too many cookies). But as long as we believe in the system, the paper stays strong.
A Simple Rule
Think of money like a ticket to a theme park. The ticket itself is just plastic. It has no meaning on its own. But because you paid for it and know you can use it for rides, it works perfectly. Fiat money is our daily ride ticket.
Examples
- Parents printing extra allowance notes when kids ask for more toys
- A shop accepting a signed card because the teacher is in charge
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See also
- Why Can't We Just Print More Money to Fix Inflation?
- What causes hyperinflation and how do governments attempt to control it?
- How Does Money Become Worthless?
- How Does Currency Devaluation Affect Everyday People?
- What is devaluation?