how is bank interest calculated?

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for example, I’ve put in $8000 into the bank with 2% pa. in a month, the interest that I should have gotten is [($8000×2%)/12] = $13.33. however, I received $10.79. is there something wrong with my calculations or is this how banks work?

In: Economics

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Banks pay interest to depositors based on actual number of days. What date did you make the deposit, and what is the date on the statement? You should be getting roughly $.44 per day in interest.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There is something called the APR or the annual percentage rate. So if the rate is 2% and you put $100 in for exactly a year you would have $102 at the end of the year, however to get to that figure you have to compound the monthly rate because you can get interest on the monthly interest if you leave the interest in the bank. – https://youtu.be/a22RkoupEgE

Anonymous 0 Comments

In some countries there’s a thing called Deposit Interest Retention Tax (DIRT). Maybe that’s why? The calculation would be:

Deposit(1 + interest rate- tax rate)