The simple interest formula is A = P(1 + r)t where P represents the amount originally deposited, r is the interest rate, and A is the amount in the account after t years.
Find r if A = 2700, P = 2200 and t = 5.
2700 = 2200(1 + r)5
Express r as a percentage to one decimal place (x.x%).
To find this, you just need to plug it in and use some algebra to figure it out. Initial: 2700 = 2200(1 + r)5 multiply 2200 and 5: 2700 = 11000(1 + r) Divide both sides by 11000: .24 = 1 + r subtract both sides by 1: -.754 = r
The problem is, a negative interest rate makes no sense if there was actually an increase of 500. We can try distributing the 11000 instead Where we left off: 2700 = 11000(1 + r) Distribute the 11000: 2700 = 11000 + 11000r Subtract 11000 from both sides: -8300 = 11000r Divide both sides by 11000: -.754 = r
As you can see, both methods reached the same impossible answer. I'm assuming that you didn't type out the equation right. Are you sure it wasn't 2700 = 2200(1 - r)5 ? If you subtract the r to make it negative, it might make more sense. But that still leaves us with a .754 rate of interest, which seems too high. Double check where you're typing from