Editor's Blog3 mins ago
Is our £billion now a thousand million [like the US, I think]
Or is it what I thought it used to be, a million, million? Only a BBC news article mention that 3 million of us in the UK have lost £3.5 million [in total, not each!] due to scams on the web. That makes it a grand each. blimey
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think you mean that 3 million of us have lost £3.5 BILLION, kia (hence meaning we have lost just over £1,000 each).
Billion interpreted as one thousand million has been widely used in the UK for many years. All budget and finance information has been quoted this way for as long as I can remember. Interestingly the term “trillion” is now being bandied about when sums of 1,000 of these billions are mentioned. This “trillion” equates to a million million – the old interpretation of a billion that you mention.
I suspect it’s all to do with climate change!
Billion interpreted as one thousand million has been widely used in the UK for many years. All budget and finance information has been quoted this way for as long as I can remember. Interestingly the term “trillion” is now being bandied about when sums of 1,000 of these billions are mentioned. This “trillion” equates to a million million – the old interpretation of a billion that you mention.
I suspect it’s all to do with climate change!
money has been international for a long time; so it's made sense for the meanings of words to be harmonised across the English-speaking world. (Perhaps we could pick up crores and lakhs from India to fill in some gaps.) I imagine the American usage prevailed because they've got more billions and more billionaires than we have; or it may just be that 'thousand million' is a bit of a mouthful.
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