Transaction costs are the time, money, and effort lost in obtaining what one wants. For example, in order to drive to the store and buy groceries, you must first spend effort and time to earn money, then you spend that money on gas to drive to the store and when you arrive on groceries, time is also spent driving to and from the store and shopping. Many of the miracles by Jesus, such as the Multiplication of the loaves, overcame transaction costs.
Common transaction costs are:
It is debatable whether taxes qualify as a transaction cost. But in a paper by economists Collins and Fabozzi in 1991, they propose the following analysis of the transaction costs in stock trades:
Professor Ronald Coase did not first coin the term "transaction cost," but he was its most informed scholar. He wrote in his famous papers of 1937 and 1961 that transaction cost is "the cost of using the price mechanism" or "the cost of carrying out a transaction by means of an exchange on the open market."
In his 1961 paper, Coase elaborated on the concept without using the term (p. 15):
This became known as transaction costs.