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Why Banking Works
When it comes to financial management, even business
professionals reach a consensus as to what is the most
effective, reliable, and secure means to manage your money, and
that is through the bank. Your bank is an effective means to
manage your bills payments, keep track of your transactions,
receive your income and whatever extraneous cash inflow, and
help you save effectively.
The last one is perhaps the most obvious feature of the bank
that people do not take advantage of. A bank, being a financial
intermediary, can actually help you save money efficiently.
Here’s how.
First, you are required to keep what is called a maintaining
balance in your bank account. This means that even if you make
deductions in your account, the bank requires you to save a
bare minimum in order to continue enjoying their services. And
yes, that translates to a forced saving on your part.
Another feature of bank saving is the fact that you are free
to continuously add to your account whenever you can.
Otherwise, your money will remain safe in your bank. Moreover,
while it’s staying in the bank, you are actually earning
interest rates on your money.
What are savings interest rates? These are payments made by
the bank to you for leaving your money in the bank. By
depositing your money in the bank, your bank utilizes a portion
of it in its loan operations where it subsequently earns
through interest and loan charges. In effect, the income they
receive trickles down to you, their source of money. This
savings interest rate is actually an effective incentive
system. Why so? If you save more money in your bank account
through your deposits and savings, you end up receiving a
higher return on the savings interest rate than other people
would.
Banks have a threshold amount for you to be able to
participate in the bank’s long-term, higher yield savings
schemes. Time-deposit accounts, mutual funds and the like
require you to leave your money untouched for a longer period
of time. In exchange for the bank’s use of your money for a
longer period of time, the percentages of interest return are
double those that you would get in a regular savings account.
You can add increments of a certain amount in order to increase
the capital you invest in your time-deposit account or mutual
fund. An increased account obviously translates to bigger
interest gains.
Talk to your local bank about their savings schemes. They
offer various mechanisms to encourage us consumers to entrust
their money to them. In a bank, your money is in a safe place,
and it is growing while it stays there.
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