32 - Personal finance Flashcards

1
Q

outgoings (Br)

A

the money that you have to spend regularly, for example on rent or food
SYN: expenditure
OPP: income
e.g.
List all your outgoings for a month.

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2
Q

expenditure

A

the total amount of money that a government, organization, or person spends during a particular period of time
SYN: outgoings (Br)
OPP: income
e.g.
huge cuts in public expenditure (=the amount of money a government spends on services for the public)

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3
Q

in credit

A

if you are in credit, there is money in your bank account
OPP: be overdrawn
e.g.
There are no bank charges if you stay in credit.

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4
Q

overdrawn

A

if you are overdrawn or if your bank account is overdrawn, you have spent more than you had in your account and so you owe the bank money
OPP: in account
e.g.
I try not to go overdrawn if possible.
My account is overdrawn by £300.

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5
Q

promptly

A

without delay
e.g.
A reply came very promptly.

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6
Q

mount up

A

to gradually increase in amount
SYN: build up; accumulate
e.g.
She finally had to go back to work to pay the bills that were mounting up.

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7
Q

bank statement

A

a printed record of activities in an account over a particular period
e.g.
I haven’t received my bank statement for last month yet.

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8
Q

cautious

A

careful to avoid danger, mistakes or risks
e.g.
a cautious driver

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9
Q

withdraw

A

to take money out of a bank account
SYN: take/get money out of an account
OPP: put money into an account

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10
Q

budget (v)

A

to carefully plan and control how much money you spend and what you will buy with it
e.g.
We’ve budgeted for a new car next year.

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11
Q

shortfall

A

the difference between the amount you have and the amount you need or expect
e.g.
1. Parents have been asked to pay £30 each to cover the shortfall in the budget.
2. an estimated shortfall of about £1 million

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12
Q

cutback

A

a reduction in something, such as the number of workers in a company or the amount of money a government or company spends
e.g.
A fall in donations has forced the charity to make cutbacks.

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13
Q

subsidize

A

if a government or organization subsidizes a company, activity etc, it pays part of its costs
e.g.
Farming is heavily subsidized (=subsidized a lot) by the government.

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14
Q

economize

A

to reduce the amount of money, time, goods etc that you use
SYN: cut down
e.g.
Higher taxes encourage people to economize on fuel.

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15
Q

surplus

A

A surplus is more of something that is needed. If it is money, the opposite is deficit, if it is food, gas, etc, the opposite is shortage.
e.g.
a huge budget surplus of over £16 billion

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