- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23765
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus concludes that the government should make depositors pay to insure their own accounts. Currently, the government requires banks to pay for the insurance, but the stimulus argues that since depositors are primarily the beneficiaries, the government should make sure that people want the benefit are the ones who pay for it.
A bank very likely passes its costs on to its customers, and the argument very specifically mentions “those who want (insurance),” so it does not make sense to believe that the argument speaks against the unfairness to banks. It does make sense, given the context, to believe that the argument assumes that the banks pass the cost of insurance on to their customers indiscriminately, thus making customers who do not benefit from the insurance pay for it anyway. Since you are asked to identify the assumption, you should focus on that.
Answer choice (A): Whether or not the government pays for the insurance for loans that banks make, it the cost of insurance could still be distributed unfairly among customers, so this incorrect response is not useful.
Answer choice (B): The argument concerned whether the current situation is fair to each customer, not whether private rather than government insurance could be utilized. Furthermore, this choice fails the negation test, because even if private insurance is possible, altered government insurance could still be the correct solution. This choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. The argument must assume that the banks do not already pass the cost on to depositors on the basis of whether the deposit is insured. If the banks were to give insured depositors lower interest rates than it gives depositors who are uninsured, that would make it likely that the bank passes the cost only to the primary beneficiaries.
Answer choice (D): Whether or not the government limits insurance protection up to a defined amount, it could still be true that the cost should be passed to depositors who want the insurance, so this choice is irrelevant and incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This incorrect choice may have been attractive, because it hits on the possibility that some depositors may not want the insurance. However, this choice only explains that the government allows uninsured accounts, which does not address the possibility that the cost is distributed to each customer, regardless of whether the customer receives the service. Furthermore, even if the government does not allow uninsured accounts, banks could still pass the cost of insurance only to depositors, and every depositor might want the insurance, so this choice fails the negation test.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus concludes that the government should make depositors pay to insure their own accounts. Currently, the government requires banks to pay for the insurance, but the stimulus argues that since depositors are primarily the beneficiaries, the government should make sure that people want the benefit are the ones who pay for it.
A bank very likely passes its costs on to its customers, and the argument very specifically mentions “those who want (insurance),” so it does not make sense to believe that the argument speaks against the unfairness to banks. It does make sense, given the context, to believe that the argument assumes that the banks pass the cost of insurance on to their customers indiscriminately, thus making customers who do not benefit from the insurance pay for it anyway. Since you are asked to identify the assumption, you should focus on that.
Answer choice (A): Whether or not the government pays for the insurance for loans that banks make, it the cost of insurance could still be distributed unfairly among customers, so this incorrect response is not useful.
Answer choice (B): The argument concerned whether the current situation is fair to each customer, not whether private rather than government insurance could be utilized. Furthermore, this choice fails the negation test, because even if private insurance is possible, altered government insurance could still be the correct solution. This choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. The argument must assume that the banks do not already pass the cost on to depositors on the basis of whether the deposit is insured. If the banks were to give insured depositors lower interest rates than it gives depositors who are uninsured, that would make it likely that the bank passes the cost only to the primary beneficiaries.
Answer choice (D): Whether or not the government limits insurance protection up to a defined amount, it could still be true that the cost should be passed to depositors who want the insurance, so this choice is irrelevant and incorrect.
Answer choice (E): This incorrect choice may have been attractive, because it hits on the possibility that some depositors may not want the insurance. However, this choice only explains that the government allows uninsured accounts, which does not address the possibility that the cost is distributed to each customer, regardless of whether the customer receives the service. Furthermore, even if the government does not allow uninsured accounts, banks could still pass the cost of insurance only to depositors, and every depositor might want the insurance, so this choice fails the negation test.