Paper money stays stable because people agree to use it and trust it, just like how you know your favorite toy is still worth playing with every day.
Imagine you and your friends all have stickers that look the same, and you all agree that one sticker can be traded for a candy bar. If everyone keeps using those stickers and believes in them, they stay valuable, kind of like paper money stays valuable in the economy.
How People Keep It Going
When grown-ups use paper money to buy things, like ice cream or toys, it shows that the money is useful. If lots of people keep using it, others will trust it too. That’s how stability happens, everyone keeps playing by the same rules.
If suddenly no one wanted stickers anymore, and you all started trading marbles instead, then the sticker would lose its value. It's similar to what can happen with money if people stop trusting it or if there are too many new coins and bills printed out at once.
So paper money stays stable because people keep using it, just like your favorite toy keeps being fun because you play with it every day!
Examples
- A country prints more paper money to pay for wars, but if there's not enough stuff to buy, the money becomes worth less.
- The central bank can control how much money is printed to keep things from getting too expensive.
Ask a question
See also
- How do central banks influence inflation and interest rates?
- How Does a Central Bank Control Inflation?
- What is Quantitative tightening (QT)?
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Have Such a Strange Dance?
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Fight Like Rival Countries?