A loan is when someone borrows money from another person or place and promises to pay it back later, like borrowing a toy from your friend and saying you’ll return it tomorrow.
Imagine you want a new bike, but you don’t have enough coins. Your mom says, “Okay, I’ll give you the bike now, but you need to give me 10 coins every week for a month.” That’s like a loan, you get something now and pay back later.
Now, interest is like a little extra coin that you have to add on top of what you borrowed. It's how the person who lent you the money gets a tiny reward for waiting.
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How interest works`
Let’s say your mom gave you the bike worth 100 coins, and she said you’d pay back 10 coins each week for 10 weeks, that’s 100 coins total. But if there's interest, maybe you have to give her 11 coins every week instead. That extra coin is the interest.
Sometimes, people use money from banks or friends and have to pay even more coins back later because of interest, just like borrowing a toy and having to give a few extra stickers as a thank-you.
Examples
- If you borrow $100 at 10% simple interest per year, you’ll owe $110 in one year.
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See also
- How Does Interest Rates | by Wall Street Survivor Work?
- Why are interest rates rising and what does it mean for loans?
- How Do Central Banks Influence Global Economies?
- How do central banks influence inflation and interest rates?
- How do central banks use interest rates to control inflation?