girlworld_club
Member
A superannuation fund paid 6% p.a for the first 10 years and then 10% p.a after that. If thanh put $5000 into this fund at the end of each year, how much would she have at the end of 25 years.
Yet apparently it is OK to be perusing the mathematics forums just 42 minutes later, is that right??and why is someone up at 7:30 on a Sunday perusing the mathematics forums
so how would you correctly answer this question, not taking into consideration the ambiguity of the question itself.This is one of those poorly worded questions in this topic. The problem is the use of 'end' to mean two different things. The first 'end' refers to a time within a calendar year, ie. probably the end of December. That makes the second 'end' somewhat ambiguous. As it stands, it should be read as 'after', as in 'after 25 years', or '25 years later'.. But many people will insist (wrongly) that this 'end' means the same as the first 'end', ie. 'at the end of the 25th year', or '24 years after the first payment'. In fact, many questions will say 'at the end of the 25th year' to make it unambiguously the latter option. I have always wondered why some books (and teachers, but never HSC exams) try to confuse the issue with this wording - why would banks ask you to pay money back over 24 years, yet call it a 25 year loan (yes I know its not a home loan question)?
But can you evaluate the expression first - is the answer correct? No point explaining otherwise.How did you get to your answer?
Would have helped had you said so much earlier.i'm not sure i don't have the answer to the question. sorry