OG 163

This topic has expert replies
Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
Posts: 24
Joined: Wed Apr 06, 2011 9:30 am
Thanked: 1 times
Followed by:1 members

OG 163

by nkaur » Fri Apr 22, 2011 7:00 am
Hi Guys,

This year Henry will save a certain amount of his income, and he will spend the rest. Next year Henry will have no income, bu for each dollar that he saves this year, he will have 1+r dollars availabe to spend. In terms of r, what fraction of his income should Henry save this year so that next year the amount he has availabe to spend will be equal to half the amount that he spends this year?

(A) 1/r+2
(B) 1/2r+2
(C) 1/3r+2
(D) 1/r+3
(ED)1/2r+3

Is there another way to solve this question? Would be great!!
Source: — Problem Solving |

GMAT/MBA Expert

User avatar
GMAT Instructor
Posts: 3835
Joined: Fri Apr 02, 2010 10:00 pm
Location: Milpitas, CA
Thanked: 1854 times
Followed by:523 members
GMAT Score:770

by Anurag@Gurome » Fri Apr 22, 2011 7:04 am
nkaur wrote:Hi Guys,

This year Henry will save a certain amount of his income, and he will spend the rest. Next year Henry will have no income, bu for each dollar that he saves this year, he will have 1+r dollars availabe to spend. In terms of r, what fraction of his income should Henry save this year so that next year the amount he has availabe to spend will be equal to half the amount that he spends this year?

(A) 1/r+2
(B) 1/2r+2
(C) 1/3r+2
(D) 1/r+3
(ED)1/2r+3

Is there another way to solve this question? Would be great!!
Let Henry spends $x and he saves $y. This implies total income = $(x + y)
Then, next year Henry spends $y(1 + r) = x/2 implies x = 2y(1 + r)

We have to find y/(x + y) = y/[2y(1 + r) + y] = y/(3y + 2yr) = 1/(3 + 2r)

The correct answer is E.
Anurag Mairal, Ph.D., MBA
GMAT Expert, Admissions and Career Guidance
Gurome, Inc.
1-800-566-4043 (USA)

Join Our Facebook Groups
GMAT with Gurome
https://www.facebook.com/groups/272466352793633/
Admissions with Gurome
https://www.facebook.com/groups/461459690536574/
Career Advising with Gurome
https://www.facebook.com/groups/360435787349781/

User avatar
GMAT Instructor
Posts: 15539
Joined: Tue May 25, 2010 12:04 pm
Location: New York, NY
Thanked: 13060 times
Followed by:1906 members
GMAT Score:790

by GMATGuruNY » Fri Apr 22, 2011 7:35 am
nkaur wrote:Hi Guys,

This year Henry will save a certain amount of his income, and he will spend the rest. Next year Henry will have no income, bu for each dollar that he saves this year, he will have 1+r dollars availabe to spend. In terms of r, what fraction of his income should Henry save this year so that next year the amount he has availabe to spend will be equal to half the amount that he spends this year?

(A) 1/r+2
(B) 1/2r+2
(C) 1/3r+2
(D) 1/r+3
(ED)1/2r+3

Is there another way to solve this question? Would be great!!
Since there is a variable in the answer choices, and the question is asking only for a fraction, we can plug in our own numbers for all of the unknowns in the problem.

Let r=2.

For each dollar that Henry saves this year, he will have 1+r = 1+2 = 3 dollars available to spend next year:
Saves this year = 1, spends next year = 3.

Next year the amount Henry has available to spend will be equal to half the amount that he spends this year:
Spends next year = 3, spends this year = 6.

What fraction of his income should Henry save this year?
Total this year = saves this year + spends this year = 1+6 = 7.
Saves/Total = 1/7. This is our target fraction.

Now we plug r=2 into the answers to see which yields our target of 1/7.

Only E works:
1/(2r+1) = 1/(2*2 + 3) = 1/7.

The correct answer is E.
Private tutor exclusively for the GMAT and GRE, with over 20 years of experience.
Followed here and elsewhere by over 1900 test-takers.
I have worked with students based in the US, Australia, Taiwan, China, Tajikistan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia -- a long list of countries.
My students have been admitted to HBS, CBS, Tuck, Yale, Stern, Fuqua -- a long list of top programs.

As a tutor, I don't simply teach you how I would approach problems.
I unlock the best way for YOU to solve problems.

For more information, please email me (Mitch Hunt) at [email protected].
Student Review #1
Student Review #2
Student Review #3