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| Question 587964:  Please help!!
 Due to inflation the price of an item was increased twice, after the second increase the price became 6 times the original. By what percent was the second increase if the first increase was 50%?
 Answer by KMST(5328)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! LOT OF EXPLANATIONS (optional reading): When you increase the price by 50%, you add to the previous price 50% of the previous price. That is 0.50 or
  times the previous price. So, if you started with a price P, after a 50% increase, the new price is
 
  or  . The idea, to calculate the new price after a certain percent increase or decrease is:
 1) express that percent as a decimal (0.5 for 50%, 0.27 for 27%, 0.045 for 4.5%, and so on), using negative numbers for price decreases.
 2) add 1 to that, to get your increase factor
 3) multiply the old price times that factor
 Example, a $60 dress, on sale at 12% off, costs
 $
  =$  =$  
 THE SOLUTION:
 From an original price, P, an increase of 50% (0.5 as a decimal) brings the price up to
 
  . A new increase of x (expressed as a decimal) brings the price up to
 
  If that equals 6 times the original price,
 
  We divide both sides by P, eliminating P, and then solve for x
 
  -->  -->  -->  -->  -->  -->  A decimal of 3.00 mean an increase of 300%.
 
 COMMENTS (more optional reading):
 That is quite an increase.
 If the original price was $200, the first 50% increase would have brought the price to $300.
 Then the second (300%) increase would have quadrupled the previous $300 price to $1200, 6 times the original price.
 That's hyperinflation. Ask anyone from Buenos Aires about it.
 (There are other places that have had bad hyperinflation, but none that I visited).
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