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Concept explainers
This activity is a group research project intended for four or five people. Present your research in a seminar on the history of interest and banking. The seminar should last about 30 minutes. Address the following questions: When was interest first charged on loans? How was lending money for a fee opposed historically? What is usury? What connection did banking and banking and interest rates play in the historic European rivalries between Christians and Jews? When and where were some of the highest interest rates charged? What were the rates? Where does the word in interest come from? What is the origin of the word shylock? What is the difference between usury and interest in modern times? What is the history of a national bank in the United States?
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Chapter 8 Solutions
Thinking Mathematically Plus MyLab Math -- Access Card Package (7th Edition) (What's New in Service Math)
- a. What is our monthly income? b. Lending agencies usually require that no more than 28% of the borrower's monthly income be spent on housing. How much does that represent in our case?arrow_forwardOne question from a survey was "How many credit cards do you currently have?" The results of the survey are provided. Complete parts (a) through (g) below.arrow_forwardA paper included analysis of data from a national sample of 1,000 Americans. One question on the survey is given below. "You owe $3,000 on your credit card. You pay a minimum payment of $30 each month. At an Annual Percentage Rate of 12% (or 1% per month), how many years would it take to eliminate your credit card debt if you made no additional charges?" Answer options for this question were: (a) less than 5 years; (b) between 5 and 10 years; (c) between 10 and 15 years; (d) never—you will continue to be in debt; (e) don't know; and (f) prefer not to answer. Only 355 of the 1,000 respondents chose the correct answer of "never." Assume that the sample is representative of adult Americans. Is there convincing evidence that the proportion of adult Americans who can answer this question correctly is less than 0.40 (40%)? Use the five-step process for hypothesis testing (HMC3) described in this section and ? = 0.05 to test the appropriate hypotheses. The paper also reported that 37.2%…arrow_forward
- A paper included analysis of data from a national sample of 1,000 Americans. One question on the survey is given below. "You owe $3,000 on your credit card. You pay a minimum payment of $30 each month. At an Annual Percentage Rate of 12% (or 1% per month), how many years would it take to eliminate your credit card debt if you made no additional charges?" Answer options for this question were: (a) less than 5 years; (b) between 5 and 10 years; (c) between 10 and 15 years; (d) never-you will continue to be in debt; (e) don't know; and (f) prefer not to answer. A USE SALT (a) Only 355 of the 1,000 respondents chose the correct answer of "never." Assume that the sample is representative of adult Americans. Is there convincing evidence that the proportion of adult Americans who can answer this question correctly is less than 0.40 (40%)? Use the five-step process for hypothesis testing (HMC3) described in this section and a = 0.05 to test the appropriate hypotheses. (Hint: See Example…arrow_forwardA paper included analysis of data from a national sample of 1,000 Americans. One question on the survey is given below. "You owe $3,000 on your credit card. You pay a minimum payment of $30 each month. At an Annual Percentage Rate of 12% (or 1% per month), how many years would it take to eliminate your credit card debt if you made no additional charges?" Answer options for this question were: (a) less than 5 years; (b) between 5 and 10 years; (c) between 10 and 15 years; (d) never—you will continue to be in debt; (e) don't know; and (f) prefer not to answer. The paper also reported that 37.6% of those in the sample chose one of the wrong answers (a, b, or c) as their response to this question. Is it reasonable to conclude that more than one-third of adult Americans would select a wrong answer to this question? Use ? = 0.05. (Round your test statistic to two decimal places and your P-value to four decimal places.) State the appropriate null and alternative hypotheses. H0: p = 1 3 versus…arrow_forwardA paper included analysis of data from a national sample of 1,000 Americans. One question on the survey is given below. "You owe $3,000 on your credit card. You pay a minimum payment of $30 each month. At an Annual Percentage Rate of 12% (or 1% per month), how many years would it take to eliminate your credit card debt if you made no additional charges?" Answer options for this question were: (a) less than 5 years; (b) between 5 and 10 years; (c) between 10 and 15 years; (d) never—you will continue to be in debt; (e) don't know; and (f) prefer not to answer. The paper also reported that 37.1% of those in the sample chose one of the wrong answers (a, b, or c) as their response to this question. Is it reasonable to conclude that more than one-third of adult Americans would select a wrong answer to this question? Use ? = 0.05. (Round your test statistic to two decimal places and your P-value to four decimal places.) State the appropriate null and alternative hypotheses. H0: p =…arrow_forward
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