kristinaroz93 wrote:"The argument is specific about saving more than $200 billion per year; the author does not assume that the total bill the next 50 to 100 years will be lower by $200 billion."
"…in this context, you cannot make the assumption that energy bills themselves will be lower by $200 billion in the next 50 to 100 years. They could easily save more than $200 billion in the future, and still have energy bills that are significantly higher than they are currently."
I don't understand how this would work at all.This answer choice is just not sticking with me=/
Maybe more hypothticals or further insight into the problem would be helpful =)
Thanks in advance!
Hello kristinaroz93,
Even if $200 billion is saved, what if the total bill went up by $3 trillion? Then the bill wouldn't be down by $200 billion, it'd be up by $2.8 trillion, if you do the math ($3 trillion - $200 billion = $2.8 trillion).
An example with smaller numbers is, if I have a coupon for $5 off a pizza, but I wait a year to use it, that doesn't mean that I'll be paying $5 less than I would normally. E.g., what if the price of the pizza goes up by $6 over a year? So, when I buy the pizza, I do save $5, but I have to pay $6 more than I used to, so the total isn't $5 lower, it's $1 higher, due to the $6 price increase--even though I used the $5 coupon.
Hope this helps,
David