116k views
3 votes
You have 2 different savings accounts. For Account​ A, the simple interest earned after 9 months is ​$5.40. For Account​ B, the simple interest earned after 18 months is ​$18.00. If the interest rate is ​3.6% for Account A and 2.4%​ for Account​ B, how much is the principal in each​ account? Which account earned you the most interest the first​ month? Explain your answer.

a) Principal for Account A: $1,200, Principal for Account B: $750, Account A earned more interest.
b) Principal for Account A: $1,500, Principal for Account B: $750, Account A earned more interest.
c) Principal for Account A: $1,000, Principal for Account B: $750, Account B earned more interest.
d) Principal for Account A: $1,000, Principal for Account B: $1,500, Account B earned more interest.

1 Answer

2 votes

Final answer:

Account A has a principal of $200 and Account B has a principal of $500. In the first month, Account B earned more interest than Account A.

Step-by-step explanation:

The question involves calculating the principal amount in two different savings accounts using the formula for simple interest: I = PRT, where I is interest, P is principal, R is the annual interest rate (in decimal), and T is the time in years. To solve for the principal (P), you rearrange the formula to P = I / (RT).

For Account A with a simple interest of $5.40 after 9 months (0.75 years) at an annual interest rate of 3.6% (0.036), the principal is P = $5.40 / (0.036 * 0.75) = $200. For Account B with $18.00 after 18 months (1.5 years) at 2.4% (0.024), the principal is P = $18.00 / (0.024 * 1.5) = $500.

To determine which account earned more interest in the first month, we calculate the monthly interest for each account (using 1/12 of the annual rate). Account A earns $200 * (0.036 / 12) = $0.60 per month, and Account B earns $500 * (0.024 / 12) = $1.00 per month. Hence, Account B earned more interest in the first month.

User Himanshu Chawla
by
7.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.