1981 AHSME Problems/Problem 12

Revision as of 19:02, 23 October 2021 by Arcticturn (talk | contribs) (Solution (Answer Choices))

Problem

If $p$, $q$, and $M$ are positive numbers and $q<100$, then the number obtained by increasing $M$ by $p\%$ and decreasing the result by $q\%$ exceeds $M$ if and only if

$\textbf{(A)}\ p>q \qquad\textbf{(B)}\ p>\dfrac{q}{100-q}\qquad\textbf{(C)}\ p>\dfrac{q}{1-q}\qquad \textbf{(D)}\ p>\dfrac{100q}{100+q}\qquad \\ \textbf{(E)}\ p>\dfrac{100q}{100-q}$

Solution (Answer Choices)

Answer Choice $A$: It is obviously incorrect because if $M$ is $50$ and we increase by $50$% and then decrease $49$%, $M$ will be around $37$.

Answer Choice $B$: If $p$ is $100$ and $q$ is $50$, it should be equal but instead we get $100$ is more than $1$. This is therefore also incorrect.

Answer Choice $C$: Obviously incorrect since if $q$ is larger than $1$, this is always valid since $\frac {1}{1-q}$ is less than $0$.

Answer Choice $D$: If $p$ is $100$ and $q$ is $50$, it should be equal but instead we get $100$ is less than $\frac {5000}{150}$. Therefore, $D$ is also incorrect.

Answer Choice $E$: If $p$ is $100$ and $q$ is $50$, it should be equal, and if we check our equation, we get $\frac {5000}{50}$ = $100$. Therefore, our answer is $\boxed {(E)\dfrac{100q}{100-q}}$