ChatterBank0 min ago
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Sally bought a bracelet for �21 which she then resold for �25. She unwisely accepted a cheque from the purchaser for �35 and gave him �10 change. She then gave the cheque to her landlord but it bounced. She had to borrow a further �35 to pay the rent. How much money has Sally actually lost?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.She hasn't lost the bracelet, she has sold it, and the money hasn't been paid.
She should have received �25 plus �10 for the change she gave, making up the cheque of �35.
But �25 for the bracelet includes a �4 profit, so the in real terms she's lost �21 + �10. In terms of what she MIGHT have made, it's still �25 + �10 but that's like stock market players saying they've lost millions when share values drop -- they never had the money in the first place, only as a potential.
The �35 she borrowed isn't loss, since it's borrowed -- we are to assume that she will eventually pay it back. It's not really part of the problem, just a bluff to confuse.
BTW, know the one about the 3 guys who pay have a meal for �27, pay �10 each, etc etc and it turns out there's a missing pound? That one's even worse for getting mixed up!
Noiret's exactly right. Think about what would have happened if the cheque *HADN'T* bounced. She'd have still spent the �21, and she'd have still had to spend �35 on her rent (I wish my flat was that cheap) no matter what. How's it even possible that she could have lost more than �35? Anyone suggesting that she has is assuming that she'd have lost money even if the cheque hadn't bounced!