- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24312
Complete Question Explanation
Must be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
The economist is basically arguing that no matter the program, the overall level of personal savings does not change – the only thing affected is where that money ends up.
Answer choice (A): There is no evidence in the passage about motives of those backing the tax-incentive proposal.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If no additional money is being invested, money is just changing hands and there will be no way to compensate for the lost tax revenues – this is true no matter how small the actual loss is.
Answer choice (C): The current program only generates small tax revenues losses – we don’t know what would happen in a different program that caused greater loss.
Answer choice (D): This is too sweeping. We only know economic growth would be enhanced by more savings, we don’t have enough evidence to conclude the economy will be in danger otherwise.
Answer choice (E): This is also too sweeping. We only know about the effectiveness of this tax-inventive program. Surely the government has other ways it could encourage saving. For example, they could offer to never tax savings or offer a free car to everyone who saves a certain amount, etc.
Must be True. The correct answer choice is (B)
The economist is basically arguing that no matter the program, the overall level of personal savings does not change – the only thing affected is where that money ends up.
Answer choice (A): There is no evidence in the passage about motives of those backing the tax-incentive proposal.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. If no additional money is being invested, money is just changing hands and there will be no way to compensate for the lost tax revenues – this is true no matter how small the actual loss is.
Answer choice (C): The current program only generates small tax revenues losses – we don’t know what would happen in a different program that caused greater loss.
Answer choice (D): This is too sweeping. We only know economic growth would be enhanced by more savings, we don’t have enough evidence to conclude the economy will be in danger otherwise.
Answer choice (E): This is also too sweeping. We only know about the effectiveness of this tax-inventive program. Surely the government has other ways it could encourage saving. For example, they could offer to never tax savings or offer a free car to everyone who saves a certain amount, etc.