(Dallas) Thousands of motorists using the zip cash lanes on Texas tollways are paying just that -- Zip! According to the North Texas Tollway Authority (NTTA), it is owed nearly $500,000 from non toll-tag users driving through the Wycliffe toll plaza.
A New York student who is friends with the fan who caught Barry Bonds` 756 home run ball looks to cash in even though he never got his hands on the historic item. (Sept. 7)
FBI agents in New Jersey arrested 11 public officials and a private individual on corruption charges. Authorities say the defendants took cash bribes and influenced public contracts. (Sept. 6)
Money
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For other uses, see Money (disambiguation).
Various denominations of currency, one form of money
Money is any good or token that functions as a medium of exchange that is socially and legally accepted in payment for goods and services and in settlement of debts. Money also serves as a standard of value for measuring the relative worth of different goods and services and as a store of value. Some authors explicitly require money to be a standard of deferred payment.[1]
Money includes both currency, particularly the many circulating currencies with legal tender status, and various forms of financial deposit accounts, such as demand deposits, savings accounts, and certificates of deposit. In modern economies, currency is the smallest component of the money supply.
Money is not the same as real value, the latter being the basic element in economics. Money is central to the study of economics and forms its most cogent link to finance. The absence of money causes an economy to be inefficient because it requires a coincidence of wants between traders, and an agreement that these needs are of equal value, before a barter exchange can occur. The efficiency gains through the use of money are thought to encourage trade and the division of labour, in turn increasing productivity and wealth.