Growth and Decay

Growth and decay describe how quantities change over time using multipliers. This is a form of percentage change that is often applied repeatedly using powers in population, finance and real-world situations.

Overview

Key Definitions

Growth

An increase in value over time.

Decay

A decrease in value over time.

Multiplier

The number you multiply by to apply percentage change.

Repeated Percentage Change

The same percentage increase or decrease applied again and again.

Exponential Growth

Repeated multiplication by a growth multiplier.

Exponential Decay

Repeated multiplication by a decay multiplier.

Key Rules

Increase by \(p\%\)

Use multiplier \(1 + \frac{p}{100}\).

Decrease by \(p\%\)

Use multiplier \(1 - \frac{p}{100}\).

One change

Multiply once by the multiplier.

Repeated change

Use powers: \( (\text{multiplier})^n \).

Common Multipliers

Increase by 10%

Multiplier \(= 1.10\).

Increase by 25%

Multiplier \(= 1.25\).

Decrease by 10%

Multiplier \(= 0.90\).

Decrease by 30%

Multiplier \(= 0.70\).

How to Solve

Step 1: Recognise the type of problem

Growth and decay questions are repeated percentage change problems.

Exam thinking: First decide growth or decay, then check if it is repeated.

Growth

The value increases each time.

Decay

The value decreases each time.

Repeated change

The percentage is applied more than once.

Growth and decay diagram showing percentage increase and decrease using multipliers over time

Step 2: Use a multiplier

Instead of working out percentages each time, use a multiplier.

New value = Original value × Multiplier
Why this works: Each percentage change is applied to the new value.

Step 3: Find the multiplier

Growth

Add to 100% then convert to decimal.
Example: 6% increase → \(1.06\)

Decay

Subtract from 100% then convert to decimal.
Example: 6% decrease → \(0.94\)

Step 4: Repeated change

If the change happens multiple times, use powers.

\( \text{Final value} = \text{Original value} \times (\text{multiplier})^n \)
\(n\) is the number of times the change happens.
Exam tip: Words like 'each year' or 'each month' mean repeated change.

Step 5: Why you cannot just add percentages

Each percentage is applied to a new value, not the original.

Key idea

Repeated percentage change is multiplicative, not additive.

Step 6: Step-by-step exam method

For percentage basics, see percentages.
  1. Identify growth or decay.
  2. Convert the percentage to a multiplier.
  3. Check if the change is repeated.
  4. Use powers if needed.
  5. Calculate and round appropriately.
  6. Include correct units.

Example Questions

Edexcel

Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics, focusing on percentage growth and decay in real-life contexts.

Edexcel

A town has a population of 24,000. The population increases by 5% each year. Calculate the population after 1 year.

Edexcel

A car worth £18,000 depreciates by 12% each year. Find its value after 1 year.

Edexcel

A salary of £28,000 increases by 3% per year. Calculate the new salary after one year.

Edexcel

A laptop costing £1,200 depreciates by 15%. Calculate its value after the depreciation.

Edexcel

The value of an investment increases from £500 to £575. Calculate the percentage increase.

AQA

Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, emphasising compound growth and decay using multipliers.

AQA

A population of bacteria grows by 8% per hour. If the initial population is 500, calculate the population after 2 hours.

AQA

A car worth £15,000 depreciates by 10% each year. Calculate its value after 2 years.

AQA

An investment of £800 grows by 4% per year. Find its value after 3 years.

AQA

The price of a television decreases from £650 to £520. Calculate the percentage decrease.

AQA

A house increases in value by 6% per year. If its current value is £200,000, calculate its value after 2 years.

OCR

Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, focusing on reasoning, compound measures, and interpreting growth and decay.

OCR

A radioactive substance decays by 5% each year. If the initial mass is 200 g, calculate the mass after 3 years.

OCR

A bank account earns 2.5% compound interest per year. If £1,000 is invested, calculate its value after 2 years.

OCR

A machine loses 20% of its value each year. If it is initially worth £5,000, calculate its value after 2 years.

OCR

The number of visitors to a website increases from 12,000 to 15,000. Calculate the percentage increase.

OCR

Explain the difference between simple growth and compound growth.

Exam Checklist

Step 1

Decide if the question is growth or decay.

Step 2

Write the percentage multiplier correctly.

Step 3

Use powers if the change happens repeatedly.

Step 4

Check whether your final answer is sensible.

Most common exam mistakes

Wrong multiplier

Using \(0.06\) instead of \(1.06\) for 6% growth.

Wrong decay multiplier

Using \(0.12\) instead of \(0.88\) for 12% decay.

No powers

Forgetting that repeated change needs \((\text{multiplier})^n\).

Too much rounding

Rounding too early can change the final answer.

Common Mistakes

These are common mistakes students make when working with growth and decay in GCSE Maths.

Using the percentage instead of the multiplier

Incorrect

A student uses \(0.15\) instead of \(1.15\) for 15% growth.

Correct

For growth, add 1 to the percentage as a decimal. For example, 15% growth means multiplying by \(1.15\), not \(0.15\).

Using the wrong decay multiplier

Incorrect

A student uses \(0.20\) instead of \(0.80\) for 20% decay.

Correct

For decay, subtract the percentage from 1. For example, 20% decay means multiplying by \(0.80\), not \(0.20\).

Adding instead of multiplying

Incorrect

A student adds the percentage repeatedly instead of applying a multiplier.

Correct

Growth and decay are multiplicative processes. You must multiply by the multiplier each time, not add the percentage.

Forgetting to use powers

Incorrect

A student applies the multiplier once instead of repeatedly.

Correct

For repeated change, use powers. For example, \(\text{value} = \text{initial} \times (\text{multiplier})^n\).

Rounding too early

Incorrect

A student rounds values during intermediate steps.

Correct

Avoid rounding until the final answer, as early rounding can lead to inaccurate results.

Try It Yourself

Practise solving problems involving exponential growth and decay.

Questions coming soon
Foundation

Foundation Practice

Use multipliers to calculate growth and decay.

Question 1

A value increases by 10%. What is the multiplier?

Games

Practise this topic with interactive games.

Games coming soon.

Frequently Asked Questions