Important Banking Terms 1
Balance
of Payment is the summation of imports
and exports made between one country and the other countries that it trades
with.
Balance
of trade: The difference in value over a
period of time between a country's imports and exports.
Base
year: In the construction of an index, the
year from which the weights assigned to the different components of the index
is drawn. It is conventional to set the value of an index in its base year
equal to 100.
Bill
of exchange: A written, dated, and signed
three-party instrument containing an unconditional order by a drawer that
directs a drawee to pay a definite sum of money to a payee on demand or at a
specified future date. Also known as a draft. It is the most commonly used
financial instrument in international trade.
Bretton
Woods: An international monetary
system operating from 1946-1973. The value of the dollar was fixed in terms of
gold, and every other country held its currency at a fixed exchange rate
against the dollar; when trade deficits occurred, the central bank of the
deficit country financed the deficit with its reserves of international
currencies. The Bretton Woods system collapsed in 1971 when the US abandoned
the gold standard.
Call
money: Price paid by an investor for
a call option. There is no fixed rate for call money. It depends on the type of
stock, its performance prior to the purchase of the call option, and the period
of the contract. It is an interest bearing band deposits that can be withdrawn
on 24 hours notice.
Capital
account; Part of a nation's balance of
payments that includes purchases and sales of assets, such as stocks, bonds,
and land. A nation has a capital account surplus when receipts from asset sales
exceed payments for the country's purchases of foreign assets. The sum of the
capital and current accounts is the overall balance of payments.
Current
account: Part of a nation's balance of
payments which includes the value of all goods and services imported and
exported, as well as the payment and receipt of dividends and interest. A
nation has a current account surplus if exports exceed imports plus net
transfers to foreigners. The sum of the current and capital accounts is the
overall balance of payments.
Currency
appreciation: An increase in the value of
one currency relative to another currency. Appreciation occurs when, because of
a change in exchange rates; a unit of one currency buys more units of another
currency. Opposite is the case with currency depreciation.
Fiscal
deficit is the gap between the government's
total spending and the sum of its revenue receipts and non-debt capital
receipts. The fiscal deficit represents the total amount of borrowed funds required
by the government to completely meet its expenditure
Foreign
exchange reserves: The stock of
liquid assets denominated in foreign currencies held by a government's monetary
authorities (typically, the finance ministry or central bank). Reserves enable
the monetary authorities to intervene in foreign exchange markets to affect the
exchange value of their domestic currency in the market. Reserves are invested
in low-risk and liquid assets, often in foreign government securities.
Gross
domestic product (GDP): Gross
Domestic Product: The total of goods and services produced by a nation over a
given period, usually 1 year. Gross Domestic Product measures the total output
from all the resources located in a country, wherever the owners of the
resources live.
Gross
national product (GNP) is the
value of all final goods and services produced within a nation in a given year,
plus income earned by its citizens abroad, minus income earned by foreigners
from domestic production. The Fact book, following current practice, uses GDP
rather than GNP to measure national production. However, the user must realize
that in certain countries net remittances from citizens working abroad may be
important to national well being. GNP equals GDP plus net property income from
abroad.
Inflation: In economics, inflation is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in an
economy over a period of time. When the price level rises, each unit of
currency buys fewer goods and services; consequently, inflation is also erosion
in the purchasing power of money a loss of real value in the
internal medium of exchange and unit of account in the economy.
International
Monetary Fund (IMF) An autonomous
international financial institution that originated in the Bretton Woods Conference
of 1944. Its main purpose is to regulate the international monetary exchange
system, which also stems from that conference but has since been modified. In
particular, one of the central tasks of the IMF is to control fluctuations in
exchange rates of world currencies in a bid to alleviate severe balance of
payments problems.
Monetary
policy: The regulation of the money
supply and interest rates by a central bank in order to control inflation and
stabilize currency. If the economy is heating up, the central bank (such as RBI
in India) can withdraw money from the banking system, raise the reserve
requirement or raise the discount rate to make it cool down. If growth is
slowing, it can reverse the process - increase the money supply, lower the
reserve requirement and decrease the discount rate. The monetary policy
influences interest rates and money supply.
Subsidy: A payment by the government to producers or
distributors in an industry to prevent the decline of that industry (e.g., as a
result of continuous unprofitable operations) or an increase in the prices of
its products or simply to encourage it to hire more labor (as in the case of a
wage subsidy). Examples are export subsidies to encourage the sale of exports;
subsidies on some foodstuffs to keep down the cost of living, especially in
urban areas; and farm subsidies to encourage expansion of farm production and
achieve self-reliance in food production.
Treasury
bill: A short-term debt issued by a
national government with a maximum maturity of one year. Treasury bills are
sold at discount, such that the difference between purchase price and the value
at maturity is the amount of interest.
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