JPG Wrote:Just a quick question - When answering this questions, I had done the following math and got the wrong answer:
.9Y + 10Y = 132,000
Why doesn't that work?
this won't work because, if
X is 10% greater than
Y, then
Y is
not 10% less than
X.
this is a universal truth for
all nonzero percentages, of which you should be acutely aware on test day:
an increase of p% and a decrease of p% DO NOT cancel other out.
this is in fact a corollary of a much more general principle stating that
percent changes are never additive. for instance, if a quantity is increased by 20% and then the resulting quantity is increased by 30%, then the original quantity
did not increase by 50%.
this is a common trap on percent problems. if you know it, then you'll be able to eliminate the "sucker answer" right away on many such problems.
you can also figure this out for yourself by thinking about things that are intuitively easier than 10% changes. for instance, to undo cutting something in half (50% decrease), you'd have to double it (100% increase).
--
in your solution, you're assuming that the least populated district should be 10%
less populated than the most populated district. as noted above, this is
not the same as assuming that the most populated district should be 10%
more populated than the least populated district.