A town has a population of 5000. It increases by 8% each year. Work out the population after 4 years, giving your answer to the nearest whole number.
Compound increases multiply each year’s total by (1 + rate). Use brackets carefully and round only at the end.
In GCSE Higher Tier Maths, compound percentage questions often appear in real-life settings such as population change, bank interest, or inflation. Unlike simple percentage problems, where growth happens once, compound growth applies the increase repeatedly each year — the new total becomes the base for the next calculation.
The standard formula is:
\[ N = P(1 + r)^t \]
In this example: \( P = 5000, r = 0.08, t = 4. \)
Substitute and calculate:
\[ N = 5000(1.08)^4 = 5000 \times 1.36049 = 6802.45. \]
So, after four years, the population is approximately 6802 people.
Each year, the increase is based on the most recent total — not the original 5000. This is why the growth accelerates. After the first year, the population becomes \( 5000 \times 1.08 = 5400. \) In the next year, the 8% is taken from 5400, not 5000. That creates the compounding effect, similar to earning interest on both your savings and the previous interest added.
| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 0 | 5000 |
| 1 | 5000 × 1.08 = 5400 |
| 2 | 5400 × 1.08 = 5832 |
| 3 | 5832 × 1.08 = 6298.56 |
| 4 | 6298.56 × 1.08 ≈ 6802.45 |
This table clearly shows how growth compounds each year.
Population growth rates vary globally, and compound models provide realistic projections. For instance, if a town’s population grows by 8% annually, this represents a consistent, steady increase — similar to how bacteria multiply or how investments grow. Over several years, even modest percentages can lead to substantial growth due to compounding.
Being able to rearrange the formula algebraically is essential for higher-level marks.
Estimation provides a quick reality check. If the population grows by 8% per year for 4 years, that’s roughly 32% total simple growth, or \( 5000 + 0.32 \times 5000 = 6600. \) The compound result of around 6800 is slightly higher, which makes sense because each year’s increase builds on the previous year’s total.
Compound growth means repeated percentage increases on a changing base. The formula \( N = P(1 + r)^t \) captures this perfectly. Substituting \( P = 5000, r = 0.08, t = 4 \) gives \( N ≈ 6802. \) This realistic town population example illustrates how percentages describe long-term growth patterns. Whether applied to investments, bacteria, or human populations, compound percentages reveal how small changes accumulate dramatically over time.