Calculates the change and the rate of change from the original value as (new − original) ÷ original × 100 (%). A decrease gives a negative rate.
This measures how much a value has grown or shrunk, expressed as a percentage of where it started. Divide the change by the original value and multiply by 100.
is the original value, is the new value and is the rate of change in per cent. The change itself is : positive when the value has risen, negative when it has fallen.
Going from 200 to 250, the change is and the rate is . The value has risen by 25%.
Always divide by the original value, never by the new one. The base you pick decides the answer.
A rise and a fall of the same percentage do not cancel out. Starting from 200, a 25% rise reaches 250, and a 25% fall from there gives , below where you began.
Per cent and percentage points are different units. If approval climbs from 40% to 50%, that is a gain of 10 percentage points, but a rate of change of 25%.
An original value of 0 offers no base to grow from, so no rate can be worked out.