Farina wrote:
Hi Brent,
If we assume x at 10% and 3000-x at 8% we dont get the same answer which is obvious but I still dont know why we cant assume like this. Although I have solved it but still there is some confusion
We should get the same answer no matter what. Let's try:
Pat invested a total of $3,000. Part of the money was invested in a money market account that paid 10 percent simple annual interest, and the remainder of the money was invested in a fund that paid 8 percent simple annual interest. Let
x = the amount of money invested at
10%So,
3000-x = the amount of money invested at
8%If the interest earned at the end of the first year from these investments was $256, how much did Pat invest at 10 percent and how much at 8 percent?1 year interest on
10% account =
0.1x1 year interest on
8% account =
0.08(3000 - x)We can write:
0.1x +
0.08(3000 - x) = 256
Expand: 0.1x + 240 - 0.08x = 256
Simplify: 240 + 0.02x = 256
Subtract 240 from both sides to get: 0.02x = 16
Solve:
x = 16/0.02 = 1600/2 =
800So,
$800 was invested at
10%, and
$2200 was invested at
0.08%Cheers,
Brent