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I buy the same chips every week and my bill is normally $90.00. Why am I now being charged $108 for the exact same items? What percentage has the store increased their prices?

User Thabo
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2 Answers

4 votes
Hi there! To find the percent of change, do change/original = x/100. The amount of change means to find the distance between two numbers and the original is the previous price. 108 - 90 = 18. Plug in the values in order to get 18/90 = x/100. Cross multiply the values in order to get 1,800 = 90x. Now, divide each side by 90 to isolate the variable. When you do, you get x = 20. The store increased their prices by 20%.
User Fupsduck
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6.7k points
2 votes

Answer:

20%

Explanation:

My bill of the chips comes every week = $90

Now the store is charging for the exact same items = $108

Increase in their prices = 108 - 90 = $18

The percentage of the increased amount =
(18)/(90) × 100

= 0.2 × 100

= 20%

The store has increased 20% in their prices.

User Macpak
by
7.4k points