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Calculating Interest
Key Facts and Exam Tips
- When saving money, interest is normally paid to the saver.
- When borrowing money, the borrower is normally charged interest
by the lender.
- The rate of interest is usually given as a percentage.
- Most examination questions tell you the interest rate per
annum. This means ‘per year’.
- The principal is the amount of money (deposited or borrowed)
that you started with.
- With simple interest, the amount you invest (the
principal) earns a certain amount of interest each year. The
principal remains the same.
- With compound interest, the amount you invest (the
principal) doesn’t stay the same. Your investment grows more
quickly because every year the interest you earn is added on to the
principal.
- Examination questions may ask you to find the total interest
paid over a period of time.
- In order to calculate the amount of interest, you should know
how to find a given percentage of an amount of money.
- The simple interest will be the same each year and you
will be told the number of years in the question.
- The compound interest is added on to the principal
(usually exam questions state that it is added at the end of each
year). When calculating with compound interest you need to work out
the new principal at the start of each new year and then find the
interest that will be gained over the year. Repeat this process for
the number of years given in the question.
- The total compound interest paid can be found by subtracting
the original principal from the final principal. It is the
difference between the amount originally invested and the total
amount after a period of time.
- You should know how to express a percentage as a decimal and
recognise that, for example, an increase of 15% can be calculated
by multiplying by 1.15.
- Questions on compound interest may ask you to find the total
invested (the final principal) at the end of a number of years. If
you can use a calculator to do this, it is often easier to multiply
repeatedly by 1.15 (if the interest rate is 15%). You can also use
the index functions on your calculator to express the number of
years that you do this for as a power.
- It is sensible to round amounts of money to the nearest penny
at the end of the calculation.
- Questions on depreciation by a percentage amount may also be
set. When something depreciates over time this means it loses
value. Here you subtract to calculate the new value at the
end of a year.
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