ECON 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Adverse Selection, Interest Rate, Moral Hazard

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Money is worth more to us now than in the future. We cannot equate costs and benefits that occur at different times. Interest rate- the price of borrowing money for a specific period of time, expressed as a percentage per dollar borrowed and per unit of time. Value of a loan with interest = (x x 1) + (x + r) = x x (1 + r) Interest is a price per dollar, per unit of time. Interest rate: r = price per $ / time. Compounding- the process of accumulation that results from the additional interest paid on previously earned interest. Future value of a sum = fv = pv x (1 + r)^n. Used to estimate the effects of compounding over time. Amount of time it will take an investment to double in value is roughly 70 time periods divided by the interest rate per period.

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