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The sum of these two uncertain estimates does not give a secure and trustworthy interest rate as most people have come to trust. It is definetely not a deterministic quantity for the investor to make rational decisions by. The investor ends up not knowing what the real interest rate of investment will be, as oposed to securities that deliberaty garantee a real rate like todays TIPS-Treasury Inflation Protected Securities Many other countries do not make this mistake, they call a spade a spade, so be cautious to state exactly what you mean in countries like Chile or Brasil.
When comparing interest rates, nominal interest rates and effective interest rates have to be distinguished. An interest rate is called nominal if the period of time after that the interest is credited (e.g. a month) is not identical to the basic time unit (normally a year).
Let's assume an annual interest rate of 6% which is credited after each month. This means that an interest of 6%/12 = 0.5% is credited every month. After one year, the initial capital is increased by the factor (1+0.005)12 ≈ 1.0616. As a result, this nominal interest rate is equivalent to an effective interest rate of 6.16%.