cost of money

English

Noun

cost of money (usually uncountable, plural costs of money)

  1. (business, finance) The interest rate paid for borrowed funds or the interest itself.
    • 1993 November 21, “Seoul Surging”, in Business Week, retrieved 25 August 2014:
      The government has also deregulated interest rates, letting the market decide the cost of money.
    • 1994 January 4, “Dow Ekes Out a Slight Rise as Most Stocks Slip”, in New York Times, retrieved 25 August 2014:
      Stocks and bonds have often moved in tandem recently because low interest rates make shares more appealing and cut the cost of money to companies.
    • 2006 June 27, Richard Lehmann, “Get Ready For Stagflation”, in Forbes, retrieved 25 August 2014:
      During the span of time that oil and other natural resources costs have more than doubled, the cost of money, or interest rates, has gone from 1% to 5%.
    • 2012 June 26, R. A., “The twilight of the central banker”, in Economist, retrieved 25 August 2014:
      Central banks change the cost of money—the interest rate—in order to clear labour markets.

See also

References

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