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Money is a medium of exchange, according to 1,000 ways to make $1,000.

Currency, on the other hand, is the "promissory note or coin". You may say that currency is a US dollar bill in the USA. But the definition of a promissory note is a "signed document saying that you will pay this much on this date." But there's no signature on the coin.

Is currency a subset of money?

Jossie Calderon
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7 Answers7

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Money in that context has two kinds of common usage:

money noun 1 A current medium of exchange in the form of coins and banknotes; coins and banknotes collectively. ‘I counted the money before putting it in my wallet’ 1.2 The assets, property, and resources owned by someone or something; wealth. ‘the college is very short of money’ - lexico

Money is an economic unit that functions as a generally recognized medium of exchange for transactional purposes in an economy. - investopedia

Currency, on the other hand, relates a lot more strongly to the underlying physical expression of money:

currency noun 1 A system of money in general use in a particular country. ‘the dollar was a strong currency’ - lexico

Currency is a medium of exchange for goods and services. - investopedia

So money is a more abstract concept, and currency more concrete. You can talk about money without referencing notes or coins, but you can't talk about currency without referencing them.

Lawrence
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Really simple answer: What's in your bank account is money. Those nicely-engraved pieces of paper in your wallet are currency (and also money).

In other words, the money in your account has no actual physical existence, it's just accounting. The bank has some currency, of course, and will give it to you if you have money in your account, or will take currency from you and add it to the money in your account. But the currency the bank holds is only a small fraction of the money in its accounts.

Nosjack
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jamesqf
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People seem to be a bit over-prescriptive here about the definitions and uses of money vs currency. They are partial synonyms and at some points one may be able to draw a distinction - othertimes not. Currency also has some wider/alternative definitions as well.

IN ECONOMICS

Conceptually, from an economics perspective, there are three key properties of something that is money: it is a medium of exchange, a store of value and a unit of account. These are all somewhat inter-related - liquidity in exchange, and consistency in pricing between goods and over time are mutually reinforcing.

There are common properties to things that work successfully as money that they are likely to share to a greater or lesser degree: to be light, discrete, robust, and be in sufficient but stable supply.

This is why at various time and places different things have achieved currency as money: shells, commodities, promissary notes, cigarettes, etc.

[[ ADDED ]] Central banks and economists distinguish between "narrow money" (coins and notes and other banks deposits and the central bank) and various definitions of "broad money" adding on other non-physical money (retail bank deposits, bank-issued noted and bonds, inter-bank lending etc).

IN ETYMOLOGY

"Money" derives ultimately from the Latin name for a mint where coins were made while "Currency" derives from the Latin for "running", "moving", "in circulation". But "money" no longers refers exclusively to physical coins.

IN LANGUAGE

In terms of practical use of language:

"Money" by itself usually refers to a form of money that is relevant to the conversation at hanf: E.g. "Do you have enough money?" is a question about whether you have sufficiente funds to hand in a form you can use. The meaning changes if I am standing infront of a carpark ticket machine that only takes coins (money = coins), signing on the dotted line for a new car (money = content of current account), or contemplating buying a new car soon (money = easily realisable savings).

Even "cash", which usually refers to physical notes & coins is sometimes used differently in, say, company accounts. "Cash-back" at the supermarket EPOS terminal means notes; "Cash-back" in a sales promotion probably means a cheque.

"Currency" can be descriptive - something can have the property of "currency" - as well as being a thing that circulates in the economy. It is more frequently used when referring to a specific unit of money in the abstract - Dollars, Sterling, Euros etc - particularly in a comparative context - e.g. international currency exchange. So I might consider the USD a "hard currency" or go to the Bureau de Change to change money into a different currency.

But I can jam most of these words in to most phrases without very much risk of being misunderstood, even if it sounds a bit off to a native speaker.

Duke Bouvier
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Yes. Currency is the bill or coin issued by the government to symbolize the money.

However, "money" can be a huge variety of concepts.

Say every week, Karen the lawyer stops by the halfway house and gives Thomas two crisp $100 bills. Thomas doesn't have the capacity to know this, but Karen manages on Jim's behalf. This has $1 million of capital, and is invested for long-term growth in the stock market. A trust fund like this could be drawn down at 4-7% a year. $10,400 a year is only 1%, but this is making the fund's capital significantly grow. This is so the fund will be able to produce $100,000+ per year in the future, which is vital, because Thomas's medical needs are expected to be much worse.

The two $100 bills are currency. This stuff we're talking about in terms of managing the trust fund, is money.

Harper - Reinstate Monica
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I'll explain properly since everything on here is confused :)

Currency is a descriptive, not definitive, term.

It simply means

"anything that is, at present, popularly used as payment and will be widely and generally taken as payment"

That's all it means.

So for example, within Disneyland, those DisneyBucks pieces of paper, you could indeed describe as currency. It would be reasonable to state "DisneyBucks are currency within Disneyland, but really you can't use them much if at all outside Disneyland."

It would be perfectly reasonable to state "US Dollars are, of course, currency anywhere in the US, and also in certain developing countries. In say France or Australia, US Dollars are not currency, they are not of course popularly used as payment and will not be widely and generally taken as payment."

So that's all "currency" is.

At different times "government paper money" has been currency, "shells" have been currency, "military scrip" has been currency, "private banking notes" have been currency, and so on.

Let's say there was some sudden financial cataclysm in the US (or any country, just the US for example) and the US government money suddenly hyperinflated and became comic, nobody would accept it for payment or exchange. Then, we would say "Wow, look what's happening in the US, the UUSD is not currency anymore."

Here's a great example. In fact in many situations the US one hundred dollar bill is not currency currently.

As anyone who, uh, launders huge amounts of paper money or is a major drug lord will tell you, large-denomination bills are no good: the only thing that is current ("that will be widely and generally accepted") are smaller-denomination bills.

Over in Europe there's a 500 Euro bill; I would say it's not really currency; generally folks won't accept it. "Currency" means widely/universally accepted as payment (in the area/time in question), I've found 500 Euro bills are really not currency.

So from the question, "Currency, on the other hand, is the "promissory note or coin"" That's totally and completely wrong on many levels. (A "coin" can just be a promissory note, or, it can be simply a token, or it can be literally some bullion.) Currency may or may not have any connection, at all, to "promissory notes" - again apparently "shells" were a popular currency in some milieu. On the other hand no-one actually knows what the US Dollar is (it is explicitly deliberately undefined, other than that the government there asserts "it" can be used for tax payments), but US Dollars (excepting large denomination notes) are absolutely current.

Note that "current" is just used in the normal meaning of the word...

So for example, it's totally normal to say "K-Pop music is current!" simply meaning it's popular, whereas jazz say is not really current today.

"Current" means nothing more than "currently popular".


Regarding "What is money" ? This is simply definitional. Various experts will give you their definitions of what they, in their academic writing, consider money.

It's completely normal to consider only gold "actually money". (So, the three or four most powerful figures in fiscal matters of the current era - think this.) Other say money is a "medium of exchange". OK. Other say money is "a function of the current social power structure", again perfectly reasonable (I defy anyone to "not need" USD or Euros). And so on.

It is utterly, utterly, pointless arguing about "what is money", because it's purely definitional.

(Consider say the question "What is a 'Symphony'?" I don't know or care, but various musicologists over the centuries, and today, would have various and different stated definitions of what a Symphony is. There is utterly no "answer" to "What is a Symphony"; it's just a term used by academics and others, and all you can do is write down the various meanings stated by each of those persons.)

So "money" is just definitional; it's utterly pointless/meaningless to "argue" about "which" definition you support or whatever.

"Currency" is a factual thing.

If I told you "US Dollar notes are currency in Anguilla", that is an observable, checkable, fact. I could literally take you there (ideally checking in to Cap Juluca!) and one could observe and check that US Dollar notes widely/universally accepted as payment/exchange.

So that's it.

Fattie
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Currency is anything people use to exchange for goods and services. Money is currency that keeps it's value over a long period of time. Dollars, Yen, Euros are all examples of currencies, but they are not money. Only Gold and Silver is money.

"Gold is money, everything else is credit" - JP Morgan

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Currency vs Money are the two words that are used in our everyday life and are often confused as being the similar thing. The terms Money and Currency at glance would appear to be synonyms but they are not, Money is for payment :) currency is worldwide known