What is credit?

Credit is like getting a promise to pay later so you can use something now.

Imagine you want to buy a toy, but you don’t have enough coins. You tell your friend, “I’ll give you the coins tomorrow.” That’s like credit, you get the toy today by promising to pay later.

How Credit Works

When you use credit, someone else gives you something (like money or a toy) with the understanding that you'll pay them back later. This could be your parent giving you money for lunch and saying, “You’ll pay me back when you get your allowance.” That’s credit in action.

Why People Use Credit

People use credit because it helps them buy things they need or want right away, even if they don’t have all the money at once. It's like borrowing a cookie from your friend now and saying, “I’ll give you one back tomorrow.”

Credit is everywhere, when you use a credit card to buy snacks, or when you borrow books from the library with the promise that you'll return them later. It’s just like making a special kind of promise, one that helps you get things now and pay for them later.

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Examples

  1. A friend lends you $10 to buy snacks, and you promise to pay them back next week.
  2. You borrow money from a bank to buy a car, and you'll pay it back with interest later.
  3. Your mom gives you some cash for school supplies, trusting you’ll return the money when you get your allowance.

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Categories: Economics · credit· loans· finance