Dictionary Definition
usury
Noun
1 an exorbitant or unlawful rate of interest
[syn: vigorish]
2 the act of lending money at an exorbitant rate
of interest
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From usuria, from L. usura "lending at interest, usury" from usus 'use', from stem of uti 'to use'Pronunciation
- /ˈjuʒəɹi/
- /"juZ@ri/
Noun
- An exorbitant rate of interest in excess of any legal rates.
- The practice of lending money at such rates as are not legal or fair.
- The practice of lending money at interest.
Translations
exorbitant rate of interest in excess of any
legal rates
- Czech: lichva
- Dutch: woekerrente or
- French: usure
- German: Wucher
- Norwegian: åger, åger
practice of lending money at illegal or unfair
rates
* Spanish: usura
References
Extensive Definition
Usury (, comes from the Medieval
Latin usuria, "interest" or "excessive interest", from the
Latin usura "interest") originally meant the charging of interest on loans. This would have included
charging a fee for the use of money, such as at a bureau de
change. After countries legislated to limit the rate of
interest on loans, usury came to mean the interest above the lawful
rate. In common usage today, the word means the charging of
unreasonable or relatively high rates of interest.
The pivotal change in the English-speaking world
seems to have come with the permission to charge interest on lent
money: particularly the Act 'In restraint of usury' of Henry VIII in
England in
1545 (see book
references).
Historical meaning
The First Council of Nicaea in 325, forbade clergy from engaging in usury. (canon 17) At the time "usury" meant simply interest of any kind, and the canon merely forbade the clergy to lend money on interest. Later ecumenical councils applied this regulation to the laity. Pope Clement V made the belief in the right to usury heresy in 1311, and abolished all secular legislation which allowed it. Pope Sixtus V condemned the practice of charging interest as "detestable to God and man, damned by the sacred canons and contrary to Christian charity." Food money in the shape of olives, dates, seeds or animals was lent out as early as c. 5000 BC, if not earlier. ... Among the Mesopotamians, Hittites, Phoenicians and Egyptians, interest was legal and often fixed by the state. But the Jews took a different view of the matter.The Hebrew Bible
regulates interest taking, but interpretations vary widely. One
understanding is that Israelites were forbidden to charge interest
on loans made to other Israelites, but allowed to charge interest
on transactions with non-Israelites. However, the Hebrew Bible
itself gives numerous examples where this provision was
evaded.
The primitive Hebrew economy was not an
established, refined mercantile nation as many around it already
were. Hence, it took a considerable historic time and economic
evolution to construct appropriate mercantile laws and
principles.
Thus, Johnson contends that the Hebrew bible
treats lending as philanthropy in a poor
community whose aim was collective survival, but which is not
obliged to be charitable towards outsiders.
A great deal of Jewish legal scholarship in the
Dark and the Middle Ages was devoted to making business dealings
fair, honest and efficient.
Usury (in the original sense of any interest) was
at times denounced by a number of religious leaders and
philosophers in the ancient world, including Plato, Aristotle,
Cato,
Cicero,
Seneca,
Plutarch,
Aquinas,
Muhammad,
Moses,
Philo and
Gautama
Buddha.
For example, Cato in
his De Re Rustica said:
"And what do you think of usury?" - "What do you
think of murder?"
But one must always consider the context, and the
context refers to economic abuses, mostly of the poor; not lending
at interest or for a just profit.
Interest of any kind is forbidden in Islam. As such,
specialized codes of banking have developed to cater to investors
wishing to obey Qur'anic law. (See
Islamic
banking)
As the Jews were ostracized from most professions
by local rulers, the church and the guilds, they were pushed into
marginal occupations considered socially inferior, such as tax and rent collecting and moneylending.
This was said to show Jews were insolent, greedy usurers. Natural
tensions between creditors and debtors were added to social,
political, religious, and economic strains. ... financial
oppression of Jews tended to occur in areas where they were most
disliked, and if Jews reacted by concentrating on moneylending to
non-Jews, the unpopularity - and so, of course, the pressure -
would increase. Thus the Jews became an element in a vicious
circle. The Christians, on the basis of the Biblical rulings,
condemned interest-taking absolutely, and from 1179 those who
practised it were excommunicated. Catholic
autocrats frequently imposed the harshest financial burdens on the
Jews. The Jews reacted by engaging in the one business where
Christian laws actually discriminated in their favour, and became
identified with the hated trade of moneylending.
Peasants who were forced to pay their taxes to
Jews who were coerced and forced into being the "front men," would
personify them as the people taking their earnings while remaining
loyal to the lords on whose behalf the Jews who were themselves
economically squeezed into working for.
Non-Jewish debtors may have been quick to lay
charges of usury against Jewish moneylenders charging even nominal
interest or fees. Thus, historically attacks on usury have wrongly
led to antisemitism. According to
Walter
Laqueur, "The issue at stake was not really whether the Jews
had entered it out of greed (as antisemites claimed) or because
most other professions were barred to them... In countries where
other professions were open to them, such as Muslim Spain and the
Ottoman
empire, one finds more Jewish blacksmiths than Jewish money
lenders. The high tide of Jewish usury was before the fifteenth
century; as cities grew in power and affluence, the Jews were
squeezed out from money lending with the development
of banking."
In England, the departing Crusaders were
joined by crowds of debtors in the
massacres of Jews at London and York in 1189-1190. In 1275, Edward
I of England passed the Statute of
Jewry which made usury illegal and linked it to blasphemy, in order to seize
the assets of the violators. Scores of English Jews were arrested,
300 hanged and their property went to the Crown. In
1290, all Jews
were expelled from England, allowed to take only what they could
carry, the rest of their property became the Crown's. The usury was
cited as the official reason for the Edict of
Expulsion.
The growth of the Lombard
banking and pawnbrokers, who moved from
city to city along the pilgrim routes, was important
for the development of trade and commerce. Laqueur continues:
"Following centuries of church condemnations of Jewish usury, the
Jews were expelled from many countries and regions, their
communities were impoverished, and very few individuals had the
necessary capital to engage in money lending. Money lending
continued, of course, and the Lombards took 250 percent interest
(this, however, did not cause a wave of anti-Lombardism).")''
And if thy brother be waxen poor, and his means
fail with thee; then thou shalt uphold him: as a stranger and a
settler shall he live with thee. Take thou no interest of him or
increase; but fear thy God; that thy brother may live with thee.
Thou shalt not give him thy money upon interest, nor give him thy
victuals for increase. (Leviticus,
25:35-37)
Thou shalt not lend upon interest to thy brother:
interest of money, interest of victuals, interest of any thing that
is lent upon interest. Unto a foreigner thou mayest lend upon
interest; but unto thy brother thou shalt not lend upon interest;
that the thy God may bless thee in all that thou puttest thy hand
unto, in the land whither thou goest in to possess it. (Deuteronomy,
23:20-21)
New Testament
There are two parables in the New Testament that refer to concepts of "usury" or "interest" both approving of the concept in principle."Wherefore then gavest not thou my money into the
bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury?"
-Bible verse |Luke|19:23|KJV
"Finally the master said to him "Why then didn't
you put my money on deposit, so that when I came back, I could have
collected it with interest?'" -Bible verse
|Luke|19:11-19:27|NIV
Luke VI 32-35 calls for giving in hope of no
return, but this refers to personal altruism, not prudent banking,
business and economic practices, which are commanded and affirmed
by Jesus in Bible verse |Luke|19:11-19:27|NIV mentioned
above.
Usury or loaning money at interest is sometimes
stated as a forbidden by the bible Bible verse |Exodus|22:25-27|NIV
and Bible verse |Deut|23:19-20|NIV at other times however, it is
approved and deemed appropriate Bible verse
|Deuteronomy|23:19-20|NIV.
The context indicates that the prohibition refers
only to what in modern times would be considered excessive and
"unconscionable" interest rates, which are outlawed in civilized
nations, as well as the illegal exploitation of the poor.
Qur'an
The following quotations are from the Qur'an:
Those who charge usury are in the same position
as those controlled by the devil's influence. This is because they
claim that usury is the same as commerce. However, God permits
commerce, and prohibits usury. Thus, whoever heeds this commandment
from his Lord, and refrains from usury, he may keep his past
earnings, and his judgment rests with God. As for those who persist
in usury, they incur Hell, wherein they abide forever (Al-Baqarah
2:275)
God condemns usury, and blesses charities. God
dislikes every disbeliever, guilty. Lo! those who believe and do
good works and establish worship and pay the poor-due, their reward
is with their Lord and there shall no fear come upon them neither
shall they grieve. O you who believe, you shall observe God and
refrain from all kinds of usury, if you are believers. If you do
not, then expect a war from God and His messenger. But if you
repent, you may keep your capitals, without inflicting injustice,
or incurring injustice. If the debtor is unable to pay, wait for a
better time. If you give up the loan as a charity, it would be
better for you, if you only knew. (Al-Baqarah 2:276-280)
O you who believe, you shall not take usury,
compounded over and over. Observe God, that you may succeed.
(Al-'Imran 3:130)
And for practicing usury, which was forbidden,
and for consuming the people's money illicitly. We have prepared
for the disbelievers among them painful retribution. (Al-Nisa
4:161)
The usury that is practiced to increase some
people's wealth, does not gain anything at God. But if people give
to charity, seeking God's pleasure, these are the ones who receive
their reward many fold. (Ar-Rum 30:39)
Usury in scholastic theology
The first of the scholastics, Saint Anselm of Canterbury, led the shift in thought that labeled charging interest the same as theft. Previously usury was seen as a lack of charity.St. Thomas
Aquinas, the leading theologian of the Catholic Church,
argued charging of interest is wrong because it amounts to "double
charging", charging for both the thing and the use of the thing.
Aquinas said this would be morally wrong in the same way as if one
sold a bottle of wine, charged for the bottle of wine, and then
charged for the person using the wine to actually drink it.
Similarly, one cannot charge for a piece of cake and for the eating
of the piece of cake. Yet this, said Aquinas, is what usury does.
Money is exchange-medium. It is used up when it is spent. To charge
for the money and for its use (by spending) is to charge for the
money twice. It is also to sell time since the usurer charges, in
effect, for the time that the money is in the hands of the
borrower. Time, however, is not a commodity that anyone can sell.
(For a detailed discussion of Aquinas and usury, go to
Thought of Thomas Aquinas).
This did not, as some think, prevent investment.
What it stipulated was that in order for the investor to share in
the profit he must share the risk. In short he must be a
joint-venturer. Simply to invest the money and expect it to be
returned regardless of the success of the venture was to make money
simply by having money and not by taking any risk or by doing any
work or by any effort or sacrifice at all. This is usury. St Thomas
quotes Aristotle as saying that "to live by usury is exceedingly
unnatural". Islam likewise condemns usury. Judaism absolutely
condemns it, whether to the alien in [their] midst" or "[their]
brother (fellow Jews)". St Thomas allows, however, charges for
actual services provided. Thus a banker or credit-lender could
charge for such actual work or effort as he did carry out e.g. any
fair administrative charges. The Catholic Church, in a decree of
the
Fifth Council of the Lateran, expressly allowed such charges in
respect of credit-unions run for the benefit of the poor known as
"montes
pietatis".
In the 13th century
Cardinal
Hostiensis enumerated thirteen situations in which charging
interest was not immoral. The most important of these was lucrum
cessans (profits given up) which allowed for the lender to charge
interest "to compensate him for profit foregone in investing the
money himself." This idea is very similar to Opportunity
Cost. Many scholastic thinkers who argued for a ban on interest
charges also argued for the legitimacy of lucrum cessans profits
(e.g. Pierre
Jean Olivi and St.
Bernardino of Siena).
Usury in literature
In The Divine Comedy Dante places the usurers in the inner ring of the seventh circle of hell, below even suicides. (Showing how cultural attitudes have changed since the 14th century, the usurers' ring was shared only by the blasphemers and sodomites.)In the 16th century
it was necessary for Shylock to convert
to Christianity and forsake usury before he could be redeemed in
the climax of The
Merchant of Venice. Thomas
Lodge's didactic tirade against London moneylenders, An Alarum
against Usurers containing tried experiences against worldly abuses
tried to incite the educated class against the harm usurers seemed
to induce in their victims.
By the 18th Century
usury was more often treated as a metaphor than a crime in itself,
so that Jeremy
Bentham's Defense of Usury was not as shocking as it would have
appeared two centuries earlier.
In the early 20th century
Ezra
Pound's
anti-usury poetry was not primarily based on the moral
injustice of interest but on the fact that excess capital was
no longer devoted to artistic patronage, as it could now be
used for capitalist
business investment. (http://www.englit.ed.ac.uk/studying/undergrd/american_lit_2/Handouts/cmc_pound.htm).
Usury and the law
"When money is lent on a contract to receive not only the principal sum again, but also an increase by way of compensation for the use, the increase is called interest by those who think it lawful, and usury by those who do not." (Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, p. 1336).In the United States, usury laws are state laws
that specify the maximum legal interest
rate at which loans can be made. Congress has opted not to
regulate interest rates on purely private transactions, although it
arguably has the power to do so under the interstate commerce
clause of Article I of the Constitution.
Congress has opted to put a federal criminal
limit on interest rates by the RICO definitions of "unlawful debt"
which make it a federal felony to lend money at an interest rate
more than two times the local state usury rate and then try to
collect that "unlawful debt".
It is a federal offense to use violence or
threats to collect usurious interest (or any other sort). Such
activity is referred to as loan sharking,
although that term is also applied to non-coercive usurious
lending, or even to the practice of making consumer loans without a
license in jurisdictions that require licenses.
Usury and royalties
Royalties are contractual obligations of the
Issuer of the royalty, made for the benefit of the holder of the
royalty. Royalties require the payment of an agreed percentage of
revenue of the Issuer, for an agreed period of time. In the event a
royalty is purchased from an Issuer, the future revenue upon which
the royalty is based is unknown at the time of the original
transaction. Therefore, the cumulative amount of the future royalty
payments is also an unknown. Royalty payments are not interest and
royalties expire without value at their maturity. To be usurious
payments made and received for the use of funds must be considered
interest for loaned funds which require repayment at the maturity
of the loan.
Usury rates in the United States
Each U.S.
state
has its own statute
which dictates how much interest can be charged before it is
considered usurious or unlawful.
If a lender charges above the lawful interest
rate, a court will not allow the lender to sue to recover the debt
because the interest rate was illegal anyway. In some states (such
as New
York) such loans are voided, meaning made void from the
beginning or ab initio. Ref NY Gen Oblig 5-501 et seq. and NY
1503.
However, there are separate rules applied to most
banks. In 1980, due to inflation, national banks
(banks that generally include N.A. in their name), federally
chartered savings banks, installment plan sellers and chartered
loan companies were exempted from state usury limits by the federal
government through a special law. This effectively overrode all
state and local usury laws.
Reference: Interest rate usury limits for U.S.
states: Usury rate
limits.
Interest-free Banks
The JAK members bank represents an example of how is possible to create an usury-free saving and loaning system, offering a feasible financial tool to all its members. Other examples of interest-free banking come from the islamic banking used in the Muslim world.Ethical arguments for and against usury
Freedom of trade
The primary ethical argument in defense of usury has been the argument of liberty against the "restraint of trade" since the borrower has voluntarily entered into the usury contract. Opponents note, however, that borrowers may be driven to such debts out of necessity, or economic duress. At the same time however, except for related party transactions where feelings of compassion, guilt, etc, compel the lender to lend without interest, in un-related party transactions where neither the borrower nor the lender has any predetermined attachment to one another, there is no incentive for the lender to lend, and the borrower to enjoy the (presumed) benefits of a loan without usury.Investment
A practical argument for usury in welfare
economics is that charging interest is essential to guiding the
investment process, based on the claim that profits are required to direct
investments to their most productive use (solving the
economic calculation problem). According to this argument,
interest-driven investment is essential to economic
growth, and therefore to the very existence of industrial
civilization. This practical argument for the utility of usury
treats all "unearned" returns to capital as interest;
traditionally, guaranteed interest is usurious, whereas
dividends from shared
ventures are less so. In this tradition, the practical case against
usury does not completely apply (although replacing debt market
investments with stock market
savings may not always be desirable). Officially, this is how
capitalist Islamic states solve the calculation problem. An example
of the 'moral' difference between dividend income and interest
income is found in The
Merchant of Venice: Shylock lends
Antonio money for trade speculation, demanding repayment in
flesh should Antonio's project fail utterly (accepting none of the
business risk).
Excessive rates
In addition to the defense of interest as such,
the practice of charging high interest rates is defended by those
who point out that such rates reflect the very fact that the loans
are being given to creditors with a high risk of default (in a
competitive debt
market the interest spread simply covers the credit
risk). Economists of the Austrian
school say that there is no such thing as a "just" interest
rate separate from the free market
equilibrium determined by the time-preferences
of individual lenders and debtors. (Other free market theorists
take a similar view on the merit of an unregulated debt market, but
may not explain the subjective estimate of a worthwhile
interest-rate bargain through time preference.)
Adverse selection and enforcement methods
Some have defended the threat or use of force
(legal or illegal) against non-payers (such as required by Shylock). This
position is based on the idea that without force there will be a
market
failure - since very high interest loans will only be taken up
by those intending to default. The need for enforcement stems from
this adverse
selection problem rather than any immorality inherent in
moneylenders. See:
"The market
for lemons".
Today's credit
reporting system in industrialized countries obviates much of
the need for the use of force. Since all potential lenders can
quickly learn of one's delinquent status, non-payers may find an
unwilling seller for many important goods, like apartment rentals,
mortgages, renting of expensive equipment without a deposit, and in
many cases, insurance or employment. In the minds of many debtors,
such considerations outweigh fear of force brought against
them.
Charities
Some low-interest charity loans (such as small
business micro-loans) have made a defense on the fact that interest
rates allow for the indefinite administration of the charity, the
replacement of defaulted loans, and in some cases, the creation of
additional loan pools in other regions. The final "ethical result"
of the interest rates justifies charging them.
Islam
In a partnership or joint venture where money is
lent, the creditor only provides the capital yet is guaranteed a
fixed amount of profit. The debtor, however, puts in time and
effort, but is made to bear the risk of loss. Muslim scholars argue
that such practice is unjust. As an alternative to usury, Islam
strongly encourages charity and direct investment in which the
debtor shares whatever profit or loss the business may incur.
References
- .
See also
Further reading
Web
- Global Islamic Finance & Commerce
- Usury is Riba in Islam, this is an exclusive site on the subject of Riba (ar-Riba, usury, interest), answering the logic and reasoning for the prohibition of usury
- USURY, A Scriptural, Ethical and Economic View, by Calvin Elliott, 1902. (a searchable facsimile at the University of Georgia Libraries; DjVu & layered PDF format)
- Catholic Encyclopedia article on Usury, 1912
- Question 78. The sin of usury (St Thomas Aquinas' Summa Theologiæ)
- Luther's Sermon on Trading and Usury
- Concordia Cyclopedia: Usury
- What Love Is This? A Renunciation of the Economics of Calvinism
- Dr. Ian Hodge on Usury
- S.C. Mooney's Response to Dr. Gary North's critique of Usury:Destroyer of Nations
- Norman Jones's article on usury from EH.NET's Encyclopedia
- Islamic definition of Usury
- Usury laws by state.
- History of Religious Injunctions Against Usury
- Origin of Modern Banking and Usury in Britain
- Buddha on Right Livelihood and Usury
- Usury (Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906 ed.)
- Usury (Beyond the Pale exposition, friends-partners.org)
- Defence of Usury by Jeremy Bentham. 1787
- Of Usury by Francis Bacon
Books
- 'In Restraint of Usury: the Lending of Money at Interest', Sir Harry Page, The Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accounts, London, 1985,
- The Bibliography therein - particularly:
- 'The Idea of Usury: from Tribal Brotherhood to Universal Otherhood', Benjamin Nelson, 2nd Edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1949, enlarged 2nd edition, 1969.
- 'Interest and Inflation Free Money: Creating an Exchange Medium That Works for Everybody and Protects the Earth', Margrit Kennedy, with Declan Kennedy: Illustrations by Helmut Creutz; New and Expanded Edition, New Society Publishers, Philadelphia, PA, USA and Gabriola Island, BC, Canada, 1995.
usury in Czech: Lichva
usury in Danish: Åger
usury in German: Wucher
usury in Spanish: Usura
usury in Estonian: Liigkasuvõtmine
usury in Finnish: Koronkiskonta
usury in French: Usure (finance)
usury in Hungarian: Uzsorás szerződés
usury in Italian: Usura
usury in Lithuanian: Lupikavimas
usury in Dutch: Woekeraar
usury in Norwegian: Åger
usury in Polish: Lichwa
usury in Portuguese: Usura
usury in Russian: Ростовщичество
usury in Sicilian: Usurariu
usury in Simple English: Usury
usury in Slovak: Úžera
usury in Swedish: Ocker
usury in Ukrainian: Лихварство
usury in Hebrew: איסור ריבית
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Cosa Nostra, Mafia, advance, advancement, advancing, bank rate, black
market, bootlegging,
compensatory interest, compound interest, discount rate, exorbitant
interest, exploitation, extortion, gambling, gray market, gross
interest, highway robbery, holdup, illegal commerce, illegal
operations, illegitimate business, illicit business, interest, interest rate,
lend-lease, lending,
lending at interest, loan-sharking, loaning, lucrative interest,
moneylending,
moonshining,
mortgage points, narcotics traffic, net interest, organized crime,
overassessment,
overcharge, penal
interest, premium,
price, price of money,
prostitution,
protection racket, racket, rate, rate of interest, shady
dealings, shylocking,
simple interest, surcharge, the rackets, the
syndicate, traffic in women, white slavery