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Number Sense: Drill Set 2, Problem 5. By what percent did his percentage grade increase from one test to the other?
Number Sense: Drill Set 3, Problem 1. This is a decrease of, approximately, what percent?
Number Sense Drill 3 Problem 3. How much interest will Warren have earned in three years?
CAHSEE Math 3.3 Number Sense 295 Views
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Description:
Number Sense Drill 3 Problem 3. How much interest will Warren have earned in three years?
Transcript
- 00:03
Here's a shmoopy question for you...
- 00:05
Young Warren Buffet deposited $1,200 into his new bank account. He earns 4% simple interest.
- 00:12
A psychic told him recently he was going to be a rich man someday,
- 00:15
so he's hoping this new bank account will mean, big, big money for him.
- 00:19
Like... maybe even TWO thousand dollars.
Full Transcript
- 00:22
How much interest will he have earned in three years?
- 00:25
Here are the potential answers...
- 00:32
OK so this question is asking about very basic interest calculations...
- 00:36
...in this case we have SIMPLE interest which means that the rate is compounded at the end
- 00:40
of the year and returned to its owner to be spent on... hair growth formula... or whatever.
- 00:45
Simple makes life much... simpler.
- 00:48
So we have 3 iterations we have to do if we want to use the brute force method...
- 00:52
First we take 1200 and multiply it by 1.04
- 00:56
Note the zero in there -- it's 4% interest, not 40
- 00:59
So 1200 times 1.04 gives you 1248.
- 01:03
That's how much is in there after the first year -- 48 bucks in interest income for doing...
- 01:07
a whole lotta nothing.
- 01:09
No wonder the rich get richer.
- 01:11
Since the interest is simple, we just multiply that simple interest number by 3 and we get
- 01:15
3 times 48, or 144.
- 01:18
1200 plus 144 is 1344 and voila -- the answer is C.
- 01:23
But quick gut check for advanced students -- what if the interest had been retained
- 01:26
in the bank account and NOT spent on hair growth formula?
- 01:30
Do the computation again for year 2 and we have 1248 times 1.04 and that gives us 1298, roughly.
- 01:37
Now we do it a third time... 1298 times 1.04 is approximately 1350.
- 01:42
Interestingly, it's a fair $6 BETTER than the simple interest formula -- that
- 01:47
is, by leaving the money in the bank, we made $6 more in interest.
- 01:50
Yeah, it's a latte today, but it adds up.
- 01:53
And if we'd been given this keep-the-money-in-the-bank question to resolve after, say, 27 years of compounding.
- 01:59
...we'd take the entire exam time doing it by this brute force method... so we need
- 02:03
another system -- a simple...ish formula.
- 02:06
We could have gotten the same answer by multiplying the 1200 times the
- 02:10
quantity (1+.04) to the 3rd power.
- 02:14
That is, we'd calculated 1.04 to the 3rd, then multiply
- 02:18
that number by the initial $1200 principal.
- 02:21
Muuuuch easier when many years are involved.
- 02:23
Oh the wealth a whole lot of sitting around on your duff can create.
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