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What is a Unit of Account?

Third, money serves as a unit of account,  which means that it is the ruler by which we measure values. For example, an accountant may charge $100 to file your tax return. That $100 can purchase two pair of shoes at $50 a pair. Money acts as a common denominator, an accounting method that simplifies thinking about trade-offs.

Related Topics

  • Legal Tender
  • Numismatics
  • Gresham’s Law
  • Barter
  • Double Coincidence of Wants
  • Parity
  • Functions of Money
  • Medium of Exchange
  • Unit of Account
  • Store of Value
  • Time Value of Money
  • Standard of Deferred Payment
  • Liquidity Preference Theory
  • National Savings and Investment Identity
  • Circular Flow of Money
  • Commodity Money
  • Gold Exchange Standard
  • Bretton Woods System
  • Fiat Money
  • Money Supply
  • M1 and M2 Money Supply
  • Monetary Base
  • Savings, Demand, and Time Deposits
  • Banks
  • How Do Banks Create Money? 
  • Financial Intermediary
  • Bank Balance Sheet
  • Money Multiplier Formula
  • Velocity of Money
  • Multiplier Effect
  • Quantity Equation of Money
  • McCallum Rule
  • Neutrality of Money
  • Real Bills Theory
  • Banking System?
  • Central Bank
  • Federal Reserve System
  • Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
  • Fed Balance Sheet
  • Term Auction Facility
  • Taylor Rule
  • How is the Federal Reserve Bank Organized?
  • What is Bank Regulation?
  • CAMELS Rating
  • FDIC
  • CFPB
  • Bank Supervision
  • Bank Runs
  • What is Deposit Insurance?
  • Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
  • Lender of Last Resort
  • Central Banks Carry Out Monetary Policy
  • Open Market Operations
  • Bank Reserve
  • Discount Rate
  • Federal Funds Rate
  • Monetary Policy
  • Contractionary and Expansionary Monetary Policy
  • Loose vs Tight Monetary Policy
  • Easy Monetary Policy 
  • Accommodative Monetary Policy
  • Dove & Hawk (Monetary Policy) – Explained
  • Tight Monetary Policy – Explained
  • Stabilization Policy
  • Pushing on a String
  • The Effect of Monetary Policy on Interest Rates
  • Federal Funds Rate
  • Gibson Paradox
  • Vasicek Interest Rate Model
  • Equation of Exchange (Economics)
  • The Effect of Monetary Policy on Aggregate Demand
  • Quantitative Easing
  • Reserve Currency
  • What are Excess Reserves?
  • Unpredictable Movements of Velocity
  • Central Banks – Unemployment and Inflation
  • Inflation Targeting
  • Fisher Effect
  • Asset Bubbles and Leverage Cycles
  • Countercyclical
  • Money Capital Market
  • Quantity Theory of Money
  • Aggregate Expenditure Model
  • IS-LM Model
  • European Capital Market Institute