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interest
(redirected from declaring interest)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.06 sec.
Interest
The price paid for borrowing money. It is expressed as a percentage rate over a period of time and reflects the rate of exchange of present consumption for future consumption. Also, a share or title in property.

interest
1. Payment for the use of borrowed money.
2. An investor's equity in a business.

Interest. Interest is what you pay to borrow money using a loan, credit card, or line of credit. It is calculated at either a fixed or variable rate that's expressed as a percentage of the amount you borrow, pegged to a specific time period.

For example, you may pay 1.2% interest monthly on the unpaid balance of your credit card.

Interest also refers to the income, figured as a percentage of principal, that you're paid for purchasing a bond, keeping money in a bank account, or making other interest-paying investments.

If it is simple interest, earnings are figured on the principal. If it is compound interest, the earnings are added to the principal to form a new base on which future income is calculated.

Interest is also a share or right in a property or asset. For example, if you are half-owner of a vacation home, you have a 50% interest.


interest

Sums paid or earned for the use of money.



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publicly declaring interest in the former Liverpool and Real Madrid player it seemed Owen was destined to have to accept a substantial drop in both wages and the standard of football he craved.
He raised questions about an apparent rise in fees paid to Mace and Jones by the hospital and whether Mr Morris had acted properly in declaring interests.
TALKING of declaring interests, why do MPs who are lawyers not have to declare a financial interest when they proclaim the merits of the Human Rights Act which has brought the legal trade so much business?
 
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