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| Question 1161991:  Cheryl invests her inheritance in 2 separate accounts. She puts part of it in an account
 earning 18% annual interest, and twice that amount in an account earning 12% interest. If
 the account at 12% earns $1200 more interest for the year than the 18% account, what is
 the amount of the inheritance?
 Answer by Theo(13342)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! x = amount invested at 18% y = amount invested at 12%
 .12 * y = .18 * x + 1200
 amount invested at 12% is two times the amount invested at 18%, getting you
 y = 2 * x, therefore:
 .12 * 2 * x = .18 * x + 1200
 simplify to get:
 .24 * x = .18 * x + 1200
 subtract .18 * x from both sides to get:
 .06 * x = 1200
 solve for x to get x = 20,000
 to confirm:
 20,000 invested at 18% gives you 3600 interest.
 40,000 invested at 12% gives you 4800 interest.
 4800 is 1200 more than 3600, confirming that the amount invested at 12% gives you 1200 more interest than the amount invested at 18%.
 
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