The government is paying 10% in interest.
What interest on Treasury bills?
The interest on Treasury bills compares the interest earned by the investor to the face value of the T-bill, in other words, it is determined as the interest(i.e. face value-purchase price) divided by the face value.
From an investor's perspective, I mean the person buy purchasing the T-bill, his rate of return is the interest divided by the amount invested, which is the purchase price.
Interest=face value-purchase price
face value=$1,000
purchase price=$900
interest=$1000-$900
interest=$100
government's interest rate=interest/face value
government's interest rate=$100/$1000
government's interest rate=10%
In other words, the government by a way of issuing the bills is paying interest of 10% to the lenders
Read more on bonds generally including government bond on:brainly.com/question/22013938
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Answer:
Therefore I can borrow $19646.12 from E-Loan.
The interest I will pay for the loan is $1,857.88.
Explanation:
The formula of present value is

PMT = The monthly payment = $448
i= Rate of interest per period 
n = The number of month = 48 months
Therefore

≈$19646.12
Therefore I can borrow $19646.12 from E-Loan.
The interest = Paid amount - Loan amount
=$[(448×48)-19646.12]
=$1,857.88
The interest I will pay for the loan is $1,857.88.
<span>As a social media user, Monette would best be characterized as the "Critic".
There are seven types of Social media user:
the creator, the conversationalist, the critic, the collector, the joiner, the spectator and the inactive.
Each user have their own functions. Critic refers to</span><span> the person who answers and responds to content that are posted by others, they also post reviews and comments about the products and services.</span>
The answer is John should continue to fix the machine himself.