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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
Ans = E.
We do not know original Gross and Deduction amounts to find new values.
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
Thanks!!

Even I had reached to the conclusion that answer should be (E) but my reasoning was flawed.

Now I have understood the concept being tested over here!!
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
simple but tricky. +1 for the question. +1 for the answer.

thanks.
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
(n2-n1)/n1 is asked.
n1=g1-d1
n2=g2-d2
1) g2=1.04g1 Not Suff. as we do not know anything abt d1/d2
2) d2=1.15d1 Not Suff. as we do not know anything abt n1/n2
Cobining, (1.04g1-1.15d1-g1+d1)/(g1-d1)=(0.04g1-0.15d1)/(g1-d1) Still Not Suff. to calculate exact %.
So, E
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
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girindra wrote:
Guy’s net income equals his gross income minus his deductions. By what percent did Guy’s net income change on January 1, 1989, when both his gross income and his
deductions increased?

(1) Guy’s gross income increased by 4 percent on January 1, 1989.
(2) Guy’s deductions increased by 15 percent on January 1, 1989.

A. Statement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) alone is not sufficient.
B. Statement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) alone is not sufficient.
C. BOTH statements TOGETHER are sufficient, but NEITHER statement ALONE is sufficient.
D. EACH statement ALONE is sufficient.
E. Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient.


I find it helps to write down the given relation:

Net Income = Gross Income - Deductions

Ques: By what % did Net Income increase if both Gross Income and Deductions increase?
First up, what comes to mind is that if both Gross Income and Deductions increase by the same percentage, Net Income will increase by the same % too.

Say, both increase by 10%,

New Net Income = (110/100)Gross Income - (110/100)Deductions
New Net Income = (110/100)(Gross Income - Deductions) = (110/100) Net Income

But here, even if we consider both statements together, we get
New Net Income = (104/100)Gross Income - (115/100)Deductions
There is no way we can find how New Net Income is related to Net Income. It will depend on the values of Gross Income and Deductions. (Take Gross Income as 100 and Deductions as 50 in one case and Deductions as 25 in another to see that Net Income changes by a different % in the two cases.)

Answer (E).
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
Net income = NI
Gross Income = GI
Deductions = D
Changed Net income NIc
so, NI = GI - D
Required percentage = (NIc/NI)*100

(A) NIc = 1.04GI - D [Change of D is not given] Insufficient
(B) NIc = GI - 1.15D [Change of GI is not given] Insufficent

For C
NIc = 1.04GI - 1.15D [No way to remove GI and D to get only NIc] Insufficient.

Ans. E
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
In questions like this, there has to be a relative information between the variables here they are I = G-D.

None of the options give this.Hence a clean E.
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
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b]Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his deductions. By what percent did Guy's net income change on January 1, 1989, when both his gross income and his deductions increased?[/b]

Given: Net Income = Gross Income - Deductions.

(1) Guy's gross income increased by 4 percent on January 1, 1989. No info about deductions. Not sufficient.
(2) Guy's deductions increased by 15 percent on January 1, 1989. No info about gross income. Not sufficient.

(1)+(2) If Gross Income=100 and Deductions=100, then Guy had decrease in Net Income (since Deductions increased by greater percent than Gross Income) BUT if Gross Income=1,000 and Deductions=100, then Guy had some increase in Net Income. So, we cannot get the percent by which Guy's net income changed on January 1, 1989. Not sufficient.

Answer: E.

OPEN DISCUSSION OF THIS QUESTION IS HERE: guy-s-net-income-equals-his-gross-income-minus-his-deduction-139876.html
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Re: Guy's net income equals his gross income minus his [#permalink]
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