Learn Before
A Loan as an Alternative Store of Value
A loan agreement, where a borrower promises to repay in the future, can function as a 'store of value' for the lender. This is particularly beneficial when the physical storage of an asset, like grain, is difficult or risky (e.g., due to spoilage). The borrower's promise to repay serves as a mechanism to preserve and transfer the lender's wealth into the future, acting as an alternative to holding the physical asset.
0
1
Tags
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.6 The financial sector: Debt, money, and financial markets - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Related
Income and Substitution Effects on a Lender's Choice
Marco's Feasible Frontier When Lending
A Loan as an Alternative Store of Value
Evaluating Strategies for a Surplus
Evaluating Wealth Preservation Strategies
A farmer has a surplus of grain after a bountiful harvest, far more than she can consume before it spoils. She wants to use this surplus to provide for her consumption in the following year. Why is lending the surplus grain to a neighbor, in exchange for a promise of repayment with additional grain next year, a superior strategy compared to simply storing the grain in her barn?
For an individual with a surplus of a perishable good, the only advantage of lending it out instead of storing it is the ability to earn interest on the loan.
An individual has a surplus of a perishable good (e.g., grain) and wants to use it to provide for consumption in a future period. Match each strategy or concept with its most accurate description in this context.
Comparing Lending to Storing
A farmer has a surplus of 100 bushels of grain that will spoil if not consumed within the current season. A neighbor, who is a reliable borrower, proposes to borrow the 100 bushels and repay the exact same amount—100 bushels—of fresh grain next season. From a purely financial perspective, why might the farmer agree to this 0% interest loan?
A farmer has a surplus of 100 bushels of a perishable grain. If the farmer chooses to store the grain for one year, 20% of it will spoil. Alternatively, the farmer can lend the entire 100-bushel surplus to a neighbor. The neighbor will repay the loan in one year. Which of the following repayment offers from the neighbor represents the least amount of grain that would still make lending a financially better choice for the farmer compared to storing it?
Evaluating a Below-Principal Loan Offer
Maximizing the Value of a Perishable Asset
Interest as an Incentive for Lenders
Learn After
A fisherman catches a large surplus of fish, far more than his family can eat before it spoils. Storing the fish is not possible. He gives the surplus fish to a neighboring farmer who needs food now. In exchange, the farmer promises to give the fisherman an equivalent value in potatoes after the autumn harvest. From the fisherman's perspective, what is the primary economic function of this agreement?
Comparing Wealth Preservation Strategies
The Farmer and the Carpenter
Wealth Preservation for a Farmer
A mango farmer has a large surplus of ripe mangoes that will spoil if not consumed within a few days. She lends the mangoes to a neighbor, who promises to repay her with an equivalent value of corn after the next harvest. For this loan to successfully function as a store of value for the farmer, the neighbor must find a way to preserve the physical mangoes until the corn is harvested.
A baker has a surplus of 100 loaves of fresh bread at the end of the day. The bread will be stale and unsellable by morning. He gives the bread to a local soup kitchen, which promises to repay him with an equivalent value of flour after their next supply delivery in one week. In this scenario, what is the primary reason the loan agreement is a more effective store of value for the baker compared to simply keeping the bread?
A vintner has 50 cases of young wine that require a year of aging in a specialized cellar to reach their peak value. The vintner lacks the proper storage space. She makes an agreement with a merchant who has a large, suitable cellar. The vintner gives the 50 cases to the merchant, and the merchant promises to pay the vintner the full market value of 50 cases of one-year-aged wine in 12 months. Which of the following represents the most significant threat to this agreement's function as a store of value for the vintner?
An ice sculptor in a mountain village creates a surplus of intricate ice sculptures during the winter. A merchant from a desert city, planning a major festival in the spring, wants to display these sculptures. The sculptor gives the merchant the ice sculptures in January. The merchant, in return, promises to deliver a cart of valuable desert spices to the sculptor in June, after the spring trade caravans arrive. For this agreement to successfully serve as a 'store of value' for the sculptor's winter labor, which of the following is the most essential component?
A stonemason has quarried a large surplus of heavy, cumbersome stone blocks. While the blocks will not spoil, storing them on her property is costly, takes up valuable space, and poses a security risk. She provides the blocks to a builder for a new project. The builder, in turn, gives the stonemason a written contract promising to pay the full value of the blocks in six months, upon the project's completion. In this context, how does the contract primarily function as a store of value for the stonemason?
A farmer has a surplus of 1,000 bushels of wheat after a harvest. Storing the wheat for a year would result in a 10% loss due to pests and spoilage, and would also incur significant storage costs. The farmer is considering several options to preserve the value of this surplus. Which of the following options best utilizes the principle of a loan as a store of value to overcome the specific problems of physical storage?