This interest is money you are given for allowing your money to be loaned out in the bank; this compound interest also works the other way, in that when you borrow money, you must pay the bank a fee for using it. Back to savings: in reality, your money does not just sit in a drawer in the bank, but it is loaned out to other bank patrons. For allowing this transaction, the bank awards a certain amount of interest. Let's say for example, you deposit one hundred dollars into a bank account, with a compound interest rate of 10% applied annually. If you were to leave it untouched for three years, your new balance would be $133.10, according to www.moneychimp.com; for just simply allowing your money to sit, you earned $33.10, not bad for not doing any work.
However, the simple idea of not spending any of that $100 dollars could be a challenge for many. Yet, if the initial deposit were a bit more, perhaps that urge would be quelled; imagine what $20,000 could do!

1 comment:
great. I think after all the explanation the exhortation at the end should be THINK (not imagine) what would happen with $20,000.
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