Discussion:
question about expression for percentage
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John61
2006-01-01 07:59:53 UTC
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For an alternative to "increased from 95% to 98%",

we sure cannot say "increased by 3% (percent)" as this expression is
relative.

but what word can we use for the absolute increase? "increase by 3 ???"

Thanks!
RafaelBlock
2006-01-02 18:34:22 UTC
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Post by John61
For an alternative to "increased from 95% to 98%",
we sure cannot say "increased by 3% (percent)" as this expression is
relative.
but what word can we use for the absolute increase? "increase by 3 ???"
An increase of three percentage points.
Post by John61
Thanks!
Gran
2006-01-02 19:30:57 UTC
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Post by RafaelBlock
Post by John61
For an alternative to "increased from 95% to 98%",
we sure cannot say "increased by 3% (percent)" as this expression is
relative.
but what word can we use for the absolute increase? "increase by 3 ???"
An increase of three percentage points.
Post by John61
Thanks!
Or: An increase of three percentage points of the original figure -
otherwise it could be read / interpreted as 3% points of 95.
--
"YESTERDAY is history,TOMORROW is a mystery,TODAY is a gift.
That's why it's called the present "
Chris Croughton
2006-01-02 21:11:27 UTC
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On Sun, 1 Jan 2006 01:59:53 -0600, John61
Post by John61
For an alternative to "increased from 95% to 98%",
we sure cannot say "increased by 3% (percent)" as this expression is
relative.
Actually in common usage (as in newspapers, radio and TV news stories)
people very often do say, incorrectly, "increased by 3%".in the case you
give there is little difference (3% of 95% is 2.85%), but an increase of
3% from 10% to 13% is a lot different from an increase of 10%.
Post by John61
but what word can we use for the absolute increase? "increase by 3 ???"
In finance when talking about interest etc. the term used is "percentage
points" or often just "points" ("the stock is down 3 points from
yesterday").

As a former mathematician the situation is often even worse. "Inflation
is up by 1%" is talking about a second derivative, the rate of increase
of a rate of increase, but politicians often use it as a figure in its
own right. Several countries have claimed things like a decsrease in
the unemployment rate -- the actual number of people unemployed was
still rising, but the rate at which they were becoming unemployed was
reducing -- as a decrease "in unemployment".

Chris C

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