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Definição e significado de giro

Definição

giro (n.)

1.a British financial system in which a bank or a post office transfers money from one account to another when they receive authorization to do so

2.a check given by the British government to someone who is unemployed; it can be cashed either at a bank or at the post office

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Definiciones (más)

definição - Wikipedia

Sinónimos

giro (n.)

check  (American), cheque  (British), giro cheque  (British)

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Locuções

1909 Giro d'Italia • 1910 Giro d'Italia • 1911 Giro d'Italia • 1912 Giro d'Italia • 1913 Giro d'Italia • 1914 Giro d'Italia • 1919 Giro d'Italia • 1920 Giro d'Italia • 1921 Giro d'Italia • 1922 Giro d'Italia • 1923 Giro d'Italia • 1924 Giro d'Italia • 1925 Giro d'Italia • 1926 Giro d'Italia • 1927 Giro d'Italia • 1928 Giro d'Italia • 1929 Giro d'Italia • 1930 Giro d'Italia • 1931 Giro d'Italia • 1932 Giro d'Italia • 1933 Giro d'Italia • 1934 Giro d'Italia • 1935 Giro d'Italia • 1936 Giro d'Italia • 1937 Giro d'Italia • 1938 Giro d'Italia • 1939 Giro d'Italia • 1940 Giro d'Italia • 1946 Giro d'Italia • 1947 Giro d'Italia • 1948 Giro d'Italia • 1949 Giro d'Italia • 1950 Giro d'Italia • 1951 Giro d'Italia • 1952 Giro d'Italia • 1953 Giro d'Italia • 1954 Giro d'Italia • 1955 Giro d'Italia • 1956 Giro d'Italia • 1957 Giro d'Italia • 1958 Giro d'Italia • 1959 Giro d'Italia • 1960 Giro d'Italia • 1961 Giro d'Italia • 1962 Giro d'Italia • 1963 Giro d'Italia • 1964 Giro d'Italia • 1965 Giro d'Italia • 1966 Giro d'Italia • 1967 Giro d'Italia • 1968 Giro d'Italia • 1969 Giro d'Italia • 1970 Giro d'Italia • 1971 Giro d'Italia • 1972 Giro d'Italia • 1973 Giro d'Italia • 1974 Giro d'Italia • 1975 Giro d'Italia • 1976 Giro d'Italia • 1977 Giro d'Italia • 1978 Giro d'Italia • 1979 Giro d'Italia • 1980 Giro d'Italia • 1981 Giro d'Italia • 1982 Giro d'Italia • 1983 Giro d'Italia • 1984 Giro d'Italia • 1985 Giro d'Italia • 1986 Giro d'Italia • 1987 Giro d'Italia • 1988 Giro d'Italia • 1989 Giro d'Italia • 1990 Giro d'Italia • 1991 Giro d'Italia • 1992 Giro d'Italia • 1993 Giro d'Italia • 1994 Giro d'Italia • 1995 Giro d'Italia • 1996 Giro d'Italia • 1997 Giro d'Italia • 1998 Giro d'Italia • 1999 Giro d'Italia • 2000 Giro d'Italia • 2001 Giro d'Italia • 2002 Giro d'Italia • 2003 Giro d'Italia • 2004 Giro d'Italia • 2005 Giro d'Italia • 2005 Giro di Lombardia • 2006 Giro d'Italia • 2006 Giro di Lombardia • 2007 Giro d'Italia • 2007 Giro di Lombardia • 2008 Giro d'Italia • 2008 Giro di Lombardia • 2009 Giro d'Italia Femminile • 2009 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11 • 2009 Giro d'Italia, Stage 12 to Stage 21 • 2009 Giro di Lombardia • 2010 Giro d'Italia • Campo Giro • General classification in the Giro d'Italia • Giro (company) • Giro (disambiguation) • Giro District • Giro Manoyan • Giro d'Italia • Giro d'Italia 1965 • Giro d'Italia 1966 • Giro d'Italia 1970 • Giro d'Italia 1971 • Giro d'Italia 1974 • Giro d'Italia 1975 • Giro d'Italia 1977 • Giro d'Italia 1979 • Giro d'Italia 1982 • Giro d'Italia 1983 • Giro d'Italia 1989 • Giro d'Italia 1990 • Giro d'Italia 2001 • Giro d'Italia 2005 • Giro d'Italia 2007 • Giro d'Italia Femminile • Giro d'Oro • Giro de Italia 1986 • Giro del Friuli • Giro del Lazio • Giro del Mendrisiotto • Giro del Piemonte • Giro del Trentino • Giro del Veneto • Giro dell'Appennino • Giro dell'Emilia • Giro della Lunigiana • Giro della Provincia di Grosseto • Giro della Provincia di Lucca • Giro della Provincia di Reggio Calabria • Giro della Romagna • Giro di Lombardia • Giro di Puglia • Giro di Sardegna • Giro di Toscana • Giro, Indiana • Josep Lladonosa i Giró • List of Giro d'Italia general classification winners • List of teams and cyclists in the 2006 Giro d'Italia • List of teams and cyclists in the 2007 Giro d'Italia • List of teams and cyclists in the 2008 Giro d'Italia • List of teams and cyclists in the 2009 Giro d'Italia • Mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia • Münsterland Giro • Piotr Giro • Points classification in the Giro d'Italia • Sparkassen Giro Bochum • Totò al giro d'Italia • Young rider classification in the Giro d'Italia

Dicionario analógico

Wikipedia

Giro

                   

A Giro (/ˈaɪər/, /ˈɪr/, /ˈʒɪr/, /ˈɪər/, or /ˈʒɪər/),[1] or giro transfer, is a payment transfer from one bank account to another bank account and instigated by the payer, not the payee. Equivalents in other countries are the United States Automated Clearing House for direct deposit and the Australian Direct Entry system.

In the United Kingdom and in other countries the term Giro may refer to a specific system once operated by the post office,[2] the former British post office Giro service was originally known as National Giro and, confusingly, was adopted by the public and the press as a shorthand term for the Girocheque which was a cheque and not a credit transfer. The commercial banks in the UK operate a paper credit transfer system known as Bank Giro.

The use of both cheques and paper giros is now in decline in a lot of countries[3] in favour of electronic payments, which are thought to be faster, cheaper and safer due to the reduced risk of fraud.

Contents

  Etymology

The term is borrowed from German, which in turn borrowed it from Italian, in the sense of "circulation of money"; the Italian term comes from the Greek gyros ("circle").[4]

  History and concept

Giro systems date back at least to Ptolemaic Egypt in the 4th century BC. State granary deposits functioned as an early banking system, in which giro payments were accepted, with a central bank in Alexandria.[5] Giro was a common method of money transfer in early banking.

The first occurrences of book money are not known exactly. The Giro system itself can be traced back to the "bancherii" in Northern Italy, especially on the Rialto (a financial center, resembling the modern day Wall Street). Originally these were money changers sitting at their desk ("bancus" = bench) that customers could turn to. They offered an additional service to keep the money and to allow direct transfer from one money store to another by checking the accounts in their storage books. Literally they opened one book, withdrew an amount, opened another book where the amount was added. This handling was naturally a very regional system but it allowed the money to circulate in the books. This led finally to the foundation of the "Banco del Giro" in 1619[6] (in Venetian language Banco del Ziro) which gave the blueprint for similar banking systems. The usage in German language can be seen in the Banco del Giro founded in Vienna in 1703 (to extend the financing business that Samuel Oppenheimer had brought from Venice in 1670).

Postal Giro or Postgiro systems have a long history in European financial services. The basic concept is that of a banking system not based on cheques, but rather by direct transfer between accounts. If the accounting office is centralised, then transfers between accounts can happen simultaneously. Money could be paid in or withdrawn from the system at any post office, and later connections to the commercial banking systems were established, often by the convenience of the local bank opening its own account at the Postgiro.

By the middle of the 20th century, most countries in continental Europe had a postal giro service. The first postgiro system was established in Austria on the early 19th century. By the time the British Postgiro was conceived, the Dutch Postgiro was very well established with virtually every adult having a postgiro account, and very large and well used postgiro operations in most other countries in Europe. Banks also adopted the Giro as a method of direct payment from remitter to receiver.

The term "bank" was not used initially to describe the service. The banks' main payment instrument was based on the cheque which has a totally different remittance model from the "Giro".

In the banking model, cheques are written by the remitter and then handed or posted to the payee, who must then visit a bank or post the cheque to his or her bank. The cheque must then be cleared, a complex process by which cheques are sorted once, posted to a central clearing location, sorted again, and then posted back to the paying branch where the cheque is finally checked and then paid.

In the Postal Giro model, giro transfers are sent through the post by the remitter to the giro centre. On receipt, the transfer is checked and the account transfer takes place. If the transfer is successful, the transfer document is sent to the recipient, together with an updated statement of account being credited. The remitter is also sent an updated statement. In the case of large utilities receiving thousands of transactions per day, statements would be sent electronically and incorporate a reference number uniquely identifying the remittance for reconciliation purposes.

The rise of electronic cheque clearing (and debit cards as preferred instruments of payment) has made this difference less important than it once was. In some stores in the United States checks are scanned at the cash register and handed back to the customer, while the funds are withdrawn from the customer's account and deposited in the store's account.

  Electronic bill payment

Modern electronic bill payment is similar to the use of giro.

Advantages include:

  • Instant access to the funds via an ATM, debit card or cheque card.
  • There is no paper cheque that can be lost, stolen, or forgotten.
  • Payments made electronically can be less expensive to the payer; typically electronic payments may cost around 25¢ (US) whereas it could cost up to $2 (US) to generate, print and mail a paper cheque. Banks may not even charge for the service at all; for example in Finland some banks charge nothing for electronic payments inside the SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area).

In the United States, the Automated Clearing House (ACH), regulated by NACHA-The Electronic Payments Association and the Federal Reserve Bank, handles all interbank transfers, including direct deposit and direct debit.

In entirely electronic bill payment, the payer receives a bill — either physically by mail or electronically from a website (electronic billing). Then, the payer reads in the information from the bill, either manually or by using the barcode on the bill, enters it to the form on the bank website, and submits the form. The payment is immediately deducted from the account balance.

  Cultural significance

Before the use of electronic transfers of payments became the norm in the United Kingdom the fortnightly 'giro' payment was the normal way of distributing benefit payments. When unemployment peaked in the 1980s large numbers of people would receive their benefit payment on the same day leading the concept of Giro Day, marked by the settlement of small debts and a noticeable increase in drinking, partying, and festivity activities. It is the focus of the 1996 film Waiting for Giro.[7][8]

  References

  1. ^ Webster online
  2. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (online)
  3. ^ Federal Reserve: Recent payment trends in the United States, 2008. "In 2003 the number of electronic payments in the US exceeded the number of cheque payments fro the firs time [1]
  4. ^ Glyn Davies, National Giro
  5. ^ A Comparative Chronology of Money, Roy Davies & Glyn Davies, 1996 & 1999.
  6. ^ http://terra-x.zdf.de/ZDFde/inhalt/28/0,1872,2112636,00.html
  7. ^ Waiting for Giro at the Internet Movie Database
  8. ^ http://www.britfilms.com/britishfilms/catalogue/browse/?id=D9CC70591b06f24FA2xXlQ97E840

  See also

   
               

 

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