Create A Test unique practice exam papers
Sign in as
School
Individual
Parent
  • Home
  • Why Create A Test
  • Schools & Education
  • Individuals
  • Parents
  • Pricing
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • Create an account
Create an account

Create A Test Blog

Sign Up Now!Different Accounts Available

The most powerful force in the Universe?

Posted on: 29 April 2012 by Create A Test Team


Compound interest: the most powerful force in the universe?

Compound interest is a very impressive force and it is an interesting part of mathematics. Albert Einstein himself said that compound interest is the most powerful force in the world and it is pretty hard to disagree.


What is compound interest?

For those that are not aware of the concept of compound interest we will give you a very simple example. If you have £100 in a bank today and your account pays 10% interest a year how much money do you have in a year?

Well firstly you have the money you originally put in (£100) but you also receive £10 interest from the bank. So at the end of the year you have £110.

The magic comes though the year after. Now you keep your money in the bank and after another year how much do you have?

You again have the money that you started with (£110) but this time the interest you have is £11. This £11 can be split into the £10 interest on the original amount of money you had plus £1 interest on your interest. 


Rule of 70: interest on interest?

Though this interest on interest starts small it quickly grows. Using the rule of 70 you can calculate that it takes 7 years to roughly double your original £100 to £200.

The rule of 70 is one way you can calculate very quickly how long it will take to double your £100 and this is how it works.

70 divided by your interest rate = number of years to double your money

70/10 = 7 years

From this you can calculate how different interest rates effect the number of years in which you can double your money. If interest rates are 5% or 20% how many years does it take to double your money?

70/5 = 14 years
70/20 = 3.5 years

Hopefully this blog will get you interested in reading more about compound interest and the rule of 70. Read more online at wiki and try to appreciate why Einstein really did think it was the most powerful force in the world.

Tags: Albert Einstein, Percentage, Compound Interest

  • Add comment

  • If you see this, leave this form field blank and turn CSS support on.
  • Send Comment

Twitter

Tweets by @createatest

Archive

2013
May (2)
April (1)
March (2)
February (1)
January (2)
2012
December (1)
November (1)
October (3)
September (1)
August (1)
July (1)
June (1)
May (1)
April (2)
March (2)
February (2)
January (2)
2011
December (1)
November (1)
October (1)
September (1)
August (2)
June (1)
May (1)
April (1)
March (1)
February (1)
January (1)
All Posts
  • Search

  • Find post

Tag cloud

homer simpson maths employment create a test government policy gcse league tables igcse schools english bac maths and tv the joy of stats marcus du sautoy teaching maths the story of maths beautiful equations exam revision international schools tatoo model formula stout guiness monopoly perfect pint uses of maths exams funny maths statistics maths jokes misuse of statistics bad statistics questioning data analysis motivations aqa edexcel ocr exam results clay mathematics institute millennium problems p versus np problem hodge conjecture poincaré conjecture riemann hypothesis yang–mills existence and mass gap navier–stokes existence and smoothness birch and swinnerton dyer conjecture millionaire daylight saving time greenwich mean time willaim willet clocks change october interesting numbers uninteresting numbers hardy ramanujan square numbers prime numbers parent account school account individual account russian billionaires football news mathematics tests personal experiences ib developments albert einstein percentage compound interest end of exams new feature maths papers website updates maths exams gcse maths papers gcse maths sequences dan pearcy negative numbers education policy personalised education adapative testing technology in education updates uk education gcses
  • Home
  • Why Create A Test
  • Schools & Education
  • Individuals
  • Parents
  • Pricing
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
Technology in Education Ltd is a company registered in England and Wales.
©2013 Createatest.co.uk | Create unlimited maths exam papers
Subscribe →