Ask Question
18 July, 04:38

A merchant offers a large group of items at $30/%$ off. Later, the merchant takes $20/%$ off these sale prices and claims that the final price of these items is $50/%$ off the original price. As a percentage of the original price, what is the difference between the true discount and the merchant's claimed discount

+3
Answers (1)
  1. 18 July, 04:59
    0
    The difference between the true discount and the merchant's claimed discount is that the true discount is 44% which is a 6% discount difference with the merchant's claimed discount of 50%.

    Explanation:

    If the merchant offers a 30% discount on products and then, offers a 20% discount from the price with the 30% discount that is not a 50% discount from the initial price as it would be a 44% discount. This because when the 30% discount is applied, customers will pay the 70% of the price and when the 20% discount is applied over this price, customers would be paying the 56% of the price:

    70*0.2 = 14

    70-14 = 56

    This means that customers would be getting a 44% discount because:

    100-56 = 44

    According to this, the difference between the true discount and the merchant's claimed discount is that the true discount is 44% which is a 6% discount difference with the merchant's claimed discount of 50%.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “A merchant offers a large group of items at $30/%$ off. Later, the merchant takes $20/%$ off these sale prices and claims that the final ...” in 📗 Business if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers