Curtis’s Speed GED

My Fast and Smart Road to the GED

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15

Apr

Speed GED…in a Sweet Vette…

Posted by Curtis  Published in Interest, Percentages

Yo, hey, I found this sweet ride…. Chevy ‘Vette… convertible…honey blue and black leather inside. Kinda used, so it’s only $27,599. A steal, right?
continue reading "Speed GED…in a Sweet Vette…"

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22

Mar

GED Math… What’s the Best Deal?

Posted by Curtis  Published in Interest, Percentages

Maybe pullin’ out the calculator’s the best way to figure this one out. Here’s the deal: I gotta buy me a sweet ‘Vette for $27,599. And I can pick one of two deals:

  1. $3,000 bucks off and 4.9% interest for 60 months
  2. Full price and 1.9% interest for 48 months
    continue reading "GED Math… What’s the Best Deal?"
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28

Dec

Paycheck advance loans? cont.

Posted by Curtis  Published in Algebra, Interest, Percentages

So, remember that problem I talked about? This guy Tony was gonna get a paycheck advance loan. Here’s the deal:

Tony wanted a loan of $200. So they wanted him to write a check for $230, dated 2 weeks in advance. He can pay back the $230 or they’ll deposit his check. It’s only thirty bucks, Tony said. (Yeah, that’s why he’s broke.) But what kind of yearly interest are they charging?

The loan is for 2 weeks. There’s 52 weeks in a year. So the yearly interest rate is 26 times the percent interest he’s paying. (Get it? There’s 26 x 2 weeks in a year.)

Compare that to 20% yearly interest on a credit card.

He’s paying 230 bucks for a 200 loan. So he’s paying 30 bucks interest. Not cool. Cuz what percentage is that of 200 bucks? To figure it out, I take a short cut. See, 10% of 200 is 20 bucks. (200 x .1 = 20) So, I figure 5% (half of 10%) is 10 bucks (half of 20 bucks). That means 30 bucks is 10% plus 5%… 15%.

I can do all that in my head, see? But if you want to do the math, it’s like this:

30/200 = .15 or 15%

Fifteen percent interest don’t sound too bad, right? But that’s only for two weeks. To get yearly interest, you gotta multiply it by 26.

15% x 26 = 390%

Three hundred ninety percent! Almost 400% interest! I told Tony, you gotta get a credit card. You pay, what, 20% interest? Plus, if you pay it off when you get the bill in a few weeks, which is the smart thing to do, you don’t pay no interest at all. Just like a payday advance, but you’re payin’ nuthin!

Course, it’s dangerous to run up a big credit card bill. And Tony can’t trust himself. So I told him to get a card with a small limit, like $500. That’ll cover him for emergencies, right? Without him gettin’ ripped off too bad. He said, “I ain’t got no credit,” and I told him to call some credit card people. Try to get a card with no fees. Here’s some information I found. Some of it’s for college students, but hey, they’re in the same boat, just getting started with credit cards.

http://www.kiplinger.com/columns/drt/archive/2005/dt051013.html

http://www.youngmoney.com/credit_debt/credit_basics/041203

http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/credit/choose.shtm

Just see what to do to get started, cuz what’s the point in paying all that extra interest?

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16

Dec

Paycheck advance loans?

Posted by Curtis  Published in Algebra, Interest, Percentages

Hey. Here’s my idea. The hardest thing on the GED for everyone seems to be math. Everyone’s always sayin’, when do you ever do math problems? In real life, you know? Well, every time you take money outta your pocket, you doin’ a math problem. I’m tellin’ you, smart money is math. So, I’m gonna focus on ways that math comes up everyday. You can get smarter in math for the GED and in your life, too.

Here’s something. This guy I know, Tony, he was strapped for cash. Had to make a car payment, and didn’t want his car repo-d. Yeah, we all been there. Best advice I give him is don’t spend all your dough and get into that situation. But, too late for that. You know how it is, everyone’s hard up.

He was gonna go to one of those payday advance loan places, and I said that’s no good. So let’s look at this. Here’s what they were offering:

Tony wanted a loan of$200. So they wanted him to write a check for $230, dated 2 weeks in advance. He can pay back the $230 or they’ll deposit his check. It’s only thirty bucks, Tony said. (Yeah, that’s why he’s broke.) But what kind of yearly interest are they charging?

The loan is for 2 weeks. There’s 52 weeks in a year. So the yearly interest rate is 26 times the percent interest he’s paying. (Get it? There’s 26 x 2 weeks in a year.)

Compare that to 20% yearly interest on a credit card.

Let me know how you figured out this comparison, and I’ll write later to tell you what I showed my friend.

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Yo! I started this blog for people like me, guys from the streets who dropped out and need to get back in. I'm headed for big success. How bout you?

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