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  2. Transfer payment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_payment

    Transfer payments to (persons) as a percent of federal revenue in the United States Transfer payments to (persons + business) in the United States. In macroeconomics and finance, a transfer payment (also called a government transfer or simply fiscal transfer) is a redistribution of income and wealth by means of the government making a payment, without goods or services being received in return ...

  3. Cash transfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cash_transfer

    Cash transfer programmes in developing countries are constrained by three factors: financial resources, institutional capacity and ideology. [3] Governments in poorer countries tend to have restricted financial resources, and are therefore limited in the amount they can invest both directly in cash transfers and in measures to ensure that such programmes are effective. [3]

  4. Remittance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remittance

    Economic research has focused on the motivation for remittance, suggesting that the key drivers for remittance are altruism, self-interest in exchange, and repayment of past expense. A mix of motivations may coexist, in scientific literature this state of mind is summarized as "tempered altruism and enlightened selfishness".

  5. Real-time gross settlement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real-time_gross_settlement

    A weak payment system may severely drag on the stability and developmental capacity of a national economy; its failures can result in inefficient use of financial resources, inequitable risk-sharing among agents, actual losses for participants, and loss of confidence in the financial system and in the very use of money.

  6. Transfer payments multiplier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_payments_multiplier

    In Keynesian economics, the transfer payments multiplier (or transfer payment multiplier) is the multiplier by which aggregate demand will increase when there is an increase in transfer payments (e.g., welfare spending, unemployment payments). [1] Transfer payments are not in the same theoretical category as government spending on goods and ...

  7. Money transfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_transfer

    Electronic funds transfer, an umbrella term mostly used for bank card-based payments; Giro (banking), also known as direct deposit; Money order, transfer by postal cheque, money gram or others; Postal order, purchased at a post office and is payable at another post office to the named recipient; Wire transfer, an international expedited bank-to ...

  8. Payment system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payment_system

    The term electronic payment refers to a payment made from one bank account to another using electronic methods and forgoing the direct intervention of bank employees. Narrowly defined electronic payment refers to e-commerce —a payment for buying and selling goods or services offered through the Internet, or broadly to any type of electronic ...

  9. Hundi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundi

    Hundis are used as a form of remittance instrument to transfer money from place to place, as a form of credit instrument or IOU to borrow money and as a bill of exchange in trade transactions. The Reserve Bank of India describes the hundi as "an unconditional order in writing made by a person directing another to pay a certain sum of money to a ...