Money and Credit
"Credit can be a lifeline — or a noose. The difference is the TERMS of the loan."
1. Chapter Overview
MONEY is what we use to exchange goods and services. CREDIT is borrowing money with the promise to repay. This chapter covers: what money IS (and how it evolved), how BANKS function as the hub of the formal credit system, the TWO FACES of credit (good debt vs debt trap), and the difference between FORMAL and INFORMAL credit in India.
2. Money — What Is It?
Money as a Medium of Exchange
- Before money: BARTER — direct exchange of goods
- BARTER problem: DOUBLE COINCIDENCE OF WANTS — both parties must want what the other has (very hard to match!)
- Money SOLVES this: everyone accepts money; you can sell your goods for money, then use money to buy what you want
- Money acts as an INTERMEDIARY
Modern Forms of Money
- Currency: coins and paper notes — issued by the RBI (Reserve Bank of India)
- Bank deposits: money kept in bank accounts — can be withdrawn or transferred
- Cheques: written instruction to bank to pay a specific amount to a specific person
- Digital payments: UPI, netbanking, cards — the newest form; India is a GLOBAL LEADER in digital payments
Why Do People Trust 'Paper' Money?
- Currency is AUTHORISED by the government — 'legal tender'
- 'I promise to pay the bearer the sum of...' — RBI Governor's signature guarantees it
- NO ONE can legally refuse payment in rupees within India
3. Banks and the Credit System
What Do Banks Do?
- Take deposits: accept money from people who have SURPLUS
- Depositors earn INTEREST on savings
- Deposits can be WITHDRAWN on demand
- Give loans: lend money to people who NEED it
- Borrowers pay HIGHER INTEREST than depositors earn
- The DIFFERENCE between interest paid and interest earned = bank's INCOME
- Banks are INTERMEDIARIES — connecting savers and borrowers
How a Loan Works — Key Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Principal | The amount you borrow |
| Interest | Extra money you pay the lender; price of borrowing |
| Collateral | Asset you pledge as GUARANTEE — bank takes it if you DEFAULT |
| Tenure | Period for which loan is taken |
| Documentation | Papers to prove income, identity, address |
Common Collateral
- Land titles, property documents
- Fixed deposits
- Gold
- Crop (for farm loans)
4. Two Sides of Credit — The Double-Edged Sword
Formal Credit (Banks, Cooperatives)
- LOW interest rates (regulated by RBI)
- Requires COLLATERAL and DOCUMENTS
- LEGALLY ENFORCEABLE — fair terms
- PROBLEM: poor people often LACK collateral and documents → cannot access bank credit
Informal Credit (Moneylenders, Relatives, Friends)
- HIGH interest rates (often EXPLOITATIVE)
- NO collateral required (lender knows borrower personally, or uses THREATS)
- NO documentation — but NO LEGAL PROTECTION either
- Moneylenders can TRAP borrowers in endless debt cycles
Credit: Good or Bad?
Good Credit (helps you grow):
- A farmer borrows at LOW interest → buys better seeds and fertiliser → higher crop yield → repays loan → PROFITS and improves life
Bad Credit (debt trap):
- A farmer borrows at HIGH interest (moneylender) → crop fails (drought) → CANNOT REPAY → borrows MORE to repay original loan → interest piles up → NEVER ESCAPES debt → may lose land, even life
Credit is NEUTRAL — the TERMS determine whether it helps or destroys.
5. India's Credit Landscape — Formal vs Informal
Who Lends in India?
| Source | Interest | Collateral | Who Uses It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Banks (formal) | Low (RBI regulated) | Required | Rich, urban, middle-class |
| Cooperatives (formal) | Low-Medium | Required/Group guarantee | Farmers, rural |
| Moneylenders (informal) | VERY HIGH | Usually none (personal/threat) | Poor, rural, unorganised workers |
| Relatives/Friends (informal) | Low or zero | None | Anyone, small amounts |
The Problem
- RICH households: ~90% credit from FORMAL sources (banks)
- POOR households: ~85% credit from INFORMAL sources (moneylenders)
- The poor pay MUCH HIGHER interest — because they lack access to formal credit
- This is NOT a credit market — it's a TWO-TIER system with the poor at the BOTTOM
Why Are the Poor Excluded from Formal Credit?
- They LACK COLLATERAL (land titles, property, fixed deposits)
- They lack DOCUMENTS (formal income proof, PAN, address proof)
- Banks find them 'RISKY' and 'UNPROFITABLE'
Solutions
- Self-Help Groups (SHGs): poor women pool savings → give small loans to members → group guarantee replaces collateral
- Cooperative banks: especially in rural areas
- Priority Sector Lending: RBI requires banks to lend a PORTION to agriculture and weaker sections
- Microfinance: small loans without traditional collateral
- Kisan Credit Cards: easier farm credit
6. Self-Help Groups (SHGs) — The Breakthrough
What Are SHGs?
- Groups of 15-20 poor people (mostly WOMEN)
- Each member saves a small amount REGULARLY
- Pooled savings → small loans to members
- Group guarantee: if one member defaults, the group is responsible
- Banks will LEND to SHGs — because the group provides the 'collateral' of mutual responsibility
Why SHGs Matter
- Give POOR WOMEN access to credit WITHOUT collateral
- Interest rates are LOW and set by the GROUP
- Builds FINANCIAL LITERACY and SELF-CONFIDENCE
- Women use loans for: small businesses, education, health, housing
- Over 10 crore women in SHGs across India
7. Exam Focus
- Barter and double coincidence of wants
- Modern forms of money (currency, deposits, digital)
- Loan terms: principal, interest, collateral, tenure, documentation
- Two faces of credit (good debt vs debt trap)
- Formal vs informal credit sources — differences in interest, collateral, accessibility
- Why the poor use informal credit
- SHGs — how they work and why they're important
8. Common Mistakes
-
Banks lend ONLY their own money — NO. Banks mostly lend DEPOSITORS' money. The depositor earns interest; the borrower pays higher interest; the bank keeps the DIFFERENCE. Banks are INTERMEDIARIES.
-
Credit is always good for the borrower — Credit is a DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD. Borrowing at HIGH interest for UNPRODUCTIVE purposes → DEBT TRAP. Borrowing at LOW interest for PRODUCTIVE investment → GROWTH. The TERMS determine the outcome.
-
Informal credit is all bad — Informal credit FILLS A GAP that formal credit leaves (access for the poor). The problem isn't informal credit per se — it's the EXPLOITATIVE TERMS. The solution is to EXPAND formal credit access, not simply condemn informal credit.
9. Conclusion
Money and credit are the CIRCULATORY SYSTEM of the economy:
- MONEY: Evolved from barter → currency → deposits → digital. Solves the double coincidence of wants.
- BANKS: Intermediaries — take deposits (from savers), give loans (to borrowers). The interest margin is their income.
- CREDIT: Good when LOW-interest, PRODUCTIVE use → helps grow. Bad when HIGH-interest, UNPRODUCTIVE → debt trap.
- INDIA'S PROBLEM: Poor borrow from moneylenders at HIGH interest. Rich borrow from banks at LOW interest. The poor NEED access to formal credit.
- SOLUTION: SHGs (group lending without collateral), cooperatives, microfinance, priority sector lending.
For CBSE:
- Loan terms explained clearly
- Formal vs informal credit table (sources, interest, collateral, who uses)
- SHGs — what, how, why important
- Two faces of credit with a concrete example
A just economy is one where a poor woman's SHG can borrow at the same rate as a rich man's company.
