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Comments on How can school children intuit why over 100, D is larger? But under 100, D% is larger?

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How can school children intuit why over 100, D is larger? But under 100, D% is larger?

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I can prove the Rule of 100 algebraically, below. But my school kids are hankering after intuition, and a plainer explanation.

Follow the Rule of 100

Should discounts be percentages or absolutes?

Consider a \$150 blender. Should you offer 20% off? Or an equivalent \$30 off?

Answer:

  • **Over \$100?** Give absolutes (e.g., \$30)
  • Under \$100? Give percents (e.g., 20%)

In both cases, you show the higher numeral. For a \$50 blender, 20% off is the same as \\$10 off — yet 20% is more persuasive because it’s a higher numeral. For a \$150 blender, the absolute discount (\\$30 off) is a higher numeral (González, Esteva, Roggeveen, & Grewal, 2016).

References

González, E. M., Esteva, E., Roggeveen, A. L., & Grewal, D. (2016). Amount off versus percentage off—when does it matter?. Journal of Business Research, 69(3), 1022-1027.

Let d = discount, p = price. Then $d, p > 0$ because there is no free lunch and the quotation is expatiating on discounts. Then

\$ off vs. % off $\iff p - d \quad \text{ vs } \quad p - (d/100)p \iff -d \quad \text{ vs } \quad -dp/100 \iff 1 \quad \text{ vs } \quad p/100 \iff p \quad \text{ vs } \quad 100. $

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5 comment threads

x-post https://www.reddit.com/r/Precalculus/comments/1257bv0/how_can_school_children_intuit_why_if_d_... (1 comment)
x-post https://www.reddit.com/r/Algebra/comments/1257q1h/how_can_school_children_intuit_why_if_d_100_... (1 comment)
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x-post https://www.reddit.com/r/Precalculus/comments/11y1ptf/how_can_school_children_intuit_why_over_... (1 comment)
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