Mastering Hire Purchase and Mortgages
CSEC Mathematics: Real-World Financial Mathematics
Essential Understanding: Hire Purchase (HP) and Mortgages are practical applications of percentage, interest, and installment calculations. These financial arrangements allow people to acquire expensive items or properties by paying over time with interest. Master these concepts to make informed financial decisions and excel in consumer arithmetic questions.
Core Concepts
Hire Purchase (HP)
Definition: A method of buying goods where the buyer pays a deposit and makes regular installment payments (usually monthly) until the full price plus interest is paid.
Key Terms:
- Cash Price: The price if paid in full immediately
- Deposit: Initial payment (usually a percentage)
- Balance: Cash price minus deposit
- Interest: Extra charge for borrowing
Mortgage
Definition: A loan specifically for purchasing property, where the property itself serves as collateral. The borrower repays the loan with interest over a long period (15-30 years).
Key Terms:
- Principal: The amount borrowed
- Interest Rate: Annual percentage charged
- Term: Loan repayment period
- Amortization: Gradual repayment through installments
Deposit
Definition: An initial payment made when entering a hire purchase agreement or mortgage.
Calculation: Usually expressed as a percentage of the cash price.
\[ \text{Deposit} = \text{Cash Price} \times \frac{\text{Deposit Percentage}}{100} \]
Example: 10% deposit on $5,000 = $500
Interest on HP
Definition: The extra amount paid for the privilege of paying in installments.
Calculation:
\[ \text{Total Interest} = \text{Total HP Price} – \text{Cash Price} \]
\[ \text{Monthly Interest} = \frac{\text{Total Interest}}{\text{Number of Months}} \]
Interest rates are usually given as simple interest per annum.
Key Formulas
Hire Purchase Total Price
\[ \text{Total HP Price} = \text{Deposit} + (\text{Monthly Payment} \times \text{n}) \]Balance to be Financed
\[ \text{Balance} = \text{Cash Price} – \text{Deposit} \]Monthly Payment
\[ \text{Monthly Payment} = \frac{\text{Balance} + \text{Interest}}{\text{Number of Months}} \]Hire Purchase vs Mortgage Comparison
| Aspect | Hire Purchase | Mortgage |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Buying consumer goods (cars, appliances) | Buying real estate (houses, land) |
| Duration | Short to medium term (1-5 years) | Long term (15-30 years) |
| Interest Rate | Usually higher (simple interest) | Usually lower (compound interest) |
| Deposit | Typically 10-30% of cash price | Typically 10-20% of property value |
| Ownership | Ownership transfers after final payment | Property serves as collateral; ownership with deed |
| CSEC Focus | Simple interest calculations | Compound interest calculations |
Interactive Payment Calculator
Compare Payment Options
Objective: Adjust the parameters to see how different deposit amounts, interest rates, and loan terms affect monthly payments and total costs.
Monthly Payment
$0.00
Total Interest
$0.00
Total Cost
$0.00
Calculation Details
Adjust the values and click “Calculate Payments” to see detailed results.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Hire Purchase Car Purchase
Problem: A car has a cash price of $24,000. It can be bought on hire purchase by paying a 25% deposit and 24 monthly installments of $850. Calculate:
(a) The deposit amount
(b) The total hire purchase price
(c) The amount of interest charged
Example 2: Mortgage Calculation
Problem: A house is valued at $300,000. A buyer pays a 20% deposit and takes a mortgage for the balance at 6% per annum compound interest for 20 years. Calculate the monthly payment (assuming interest is compounded monthly).
CSEC Past Paper Questions
CSEC 2018, Paper 2 Question 5(b)
Question: A refrigerator has a cash price of $4,500. It can also be purchased on hire purchase by making a deposit of 15% of the cash price and 24 monthly payments of $180.
(i) Calculate the hire purchase price of the refrigerator.
(ii) Calculate the amount saved by buying the refrigerator for cash instead of on hire purchase.
Key Examination Insights
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting to subtract the deposit from the cash price before calculating interest.
- Confusing simple interest (HP) with compound interest (mortgages).
- Calculating interest on the full cash price instead of the balance.
- Using years instead of months (or vice versa) in calculations.
Success Strategies
- Always write down what each number represents (cash price, deposit, balance, etc.).
- Draw a timeline showing deposit, monthly payments, and total period.
- For HP problems, calculate the total HP price first, then subtract cash price to find interest.
- Check your answer: Total HP price should be greater than cash price.
CSEC Practice Arena
Test Your Understanding
CSEC Examination Mastery Tip
Hire Purchase Strategy: In HP questions, always follow this systematic approach:
- Calculate the deposit: Cash price × deposit percentage
- Calculate the balance: Cash price – deposit
- Calculate total installment payments: Monthly payment × number of months
- Calculate total HP price: Deposit + total installments
- Calculate interest: Total HP price – cash price
Label each calculation clearly to avoid confusion and ensure you earn method marks even if your final answer is incorrect.
