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IB Maths AA 1.4 Notes

This page contains our IB Maths AA notes for 1.4. By reading each one of these notes, you will fully cover the content for IB Maths AA 'Interest'.

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Simple interest

Financial mathematics applies sequences and series to money. In this topic, the main ideas are simple interest, compound interest and annual depreciation. These are part of the financial applications of geometric sequences and series, alongside calculating real value using inflation.

Simple interest is interest calculated only on the original amount invested or borrowed. If a principal of PP is invested at a rate of r%r\% per year for nn years, then the interest added each year is constant. This means simple interest follows an arithmetic pattern.

The simple interest formula is

A=P(1+rn100)A=P\left(1+\frac{rn}{100}\right)

where AA is the final amount, PP is the original amount, rr is the annual interest rate and nn is the number of years.

A sum of $1000\$1000 is invested at 6%6\% simple interest for 44 years.

A=1000(1+6×4100)A=1000\left(1+\frac{6\times4}{100}\right)

A=1000(1.24)A=1000(1.24)

A=1240A=1240

So the final amount is $1240\$1240.

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