Adjustments in interest rates are like changing how much you pay for a toy when you borrow it from a friend.
Imagine you have a piggy bank where you save your allowance. If you want to buy something now but don’t have enough money, you can ask your friend for a loan, they give you the money today, and you promise to give them back more later. The extra amount is like interest. Now, if your friend says, “I’m going to charge you less because I want you to borrow more,” that’s an adjustment in interest rates.
When Rates Go Up or Down
If the interest rate goes up, it means you have to pay back more money later, like when your friend asks for a bigger extra amount. This might make you think twice about borrowing.
If the interest rate goes down, you get to keep more of your allowance after paying back the loan, like when your friend says, “I’ll take just a little extra this time.”
Banks and big companies do this too, but with grown-up money, like when they lend you money for a house or a car. They change the rates so people can borrow more or less easily.
Examples
- A central bank raises interest rates to slow down inflation, like turning up the heat in a room that's already too warm.
Ask a question
See also
- How do central banks decide to raise or lower interest rates?
- What are central bank rates?
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Have Such a Tangled Relationship?
- Why Do Inflation and Interest Rates Have Such a Strange Dance?
- How does raising interest rates control inflation?