Chapter 6 What Is Consumer Credit
Collateral
is a from of security to help guarantee that the creditor will be repaid
Net income
is the income you recieve(your take-home pay, allowance, gifts, interest on bank accounts, and so on)
Simple interest
is the interest computed only on the principal, the amount that you borrow
Line of credit
is the maximum amount of money the creditor has made available to you
Credit rating
is the measure of a person's ability and willingness to make credit payments on time
Minimum monthly payment
is the smallest amount you can pay and remain a borrower in good standing
Finance charge
is the total dollar amount you pay to use credit
Bankruptcy
s a legal process in which some or all of the assets of a debtor are distributed among the creditors because the debtor is unable to pay his or her debts.
Interest
s a periodic charge in exchange for the use of credit
Annual Percentage rate (APR)
shows how much credit costs you on a yearly basis, expressed as a percentage.
Principal
the amount you borrow
Indebtedness
the condition of being deeply in debt
Consumer Credit
the use of credit for personal needs, dates back to colonial times.
Open-end credit
you borrow money for a variety of goods and services
Closed-end credit
you receive a one-time loan that you will pay back over a specific period of time and in payments of equal amounts
Creditor
an entity (a bank, finance company, credit union, business, or individual) to which money is owed-agrees to advance an individual the money, goods, or services.
Co-signing
a loan means that you agree to be responsible for loan payments if the other party fails to make them
Grace period
a time period during which no finance charges will be added to your account
Credit
an arrangement to receive cash, goods, or services now and pay for them in the future
Debt collectors
businesses that collect debts for creditors.