Profit and Cost (Elementary Understanding)
At the primary level, profit and loss are taught as an everyday idea, not as a formula with percentages. The cost price is the money a shopkeeper pays to buy or make a thing, and the selling price is the money a customer pays to buy it from the shop. If the selling price is more than the cost price, the shopkeeper gains, and that gain is the profit: profit equals selling price minus cost price. If the selling price is less than the cost price, the shopkeeper loses money, and that shortfall is the loss: loss equals cost price minus selling price. For example, if a toy is bought for Rs 40 and sold for Rs 55, the profit is 55 - 40 = Rs 15; if it had been sold for only Rs 35, the loss would be 40 - 35 = Rs 5. The whole idea rests on a simple subtraction once children can tell which price is bigger. Teachers usually act this out with a classroom shop so that children feel the difference between buying and selling, and learn that a sale can end in a gain or a loss depending on the two prices. Percentage profit and loss come much later; at this stage the focus is firmly on the rupee difference.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Rupees and paise
| Basic equivalence | 1 rupee = 100 paise |
|---|---|
| Decimal form | Rs 45.75 means 45 rupees and 75 paise |
| Paise to rupees | 250 paise = Rs 2.50 |
| Rupees to paise | Rs 3.05 = 305 paise |
Cost, profit and change basics
| Total cost | Total = sum of (price x quantity) for each item |
|---|---|
| Profit | Profit = Selling Price - Cost Price (when SP is more) |
| Loss | Loss = Cost Price - Selling Price (when SP is less) |
| Change | Change = Amount Given - Total Cost |