- Fri Apr 05, 2019 5:06 pm
#63911
I see several problems with answer C here, whardy21. Let me see if I can convince you to hate it!
1. There is no evidence in the stimulus that Japan's economy is successful, just that it's training effort is one that is the sort that is needed to become the most successful. In other words, they are doing the right thing, but we have no reason to believe they have succeeded yet. Answer C assumes that success, and a Must Be True answer should assume nothing.
2. The stimulus tells us nothing about whether Japan's labor base is "uncommonly" narrow. Maybe it's very common worldwide to have that distribution of highly skilled labor compared to low-skilled workers? Perhaps most of the world is exactly the same way? Answer C assumes that they are rare, rather than common, and again, the right answer should assume nothing.
3. Answer C is broadly about "highly skilled labor", but fails to specify that we are talking about being skilled at "new technologies". Perhaps Japan has a huge supply of people who are highly skilled, but just not at the new tech. Like, they have incredibly skilled craftsmen, blacksmiths, automotive mechanics specializing in 1960's-era internal combustion engines, and the very best dog trainers in the world? There could be a massive supply of people who are "highly skilled" at all the wrong stuff.
I hate answer C with a fiery passion! It's filled with nasty, stinking new information that must be rejected in a Must Be True scenario! I hope by now you can smell its awful stench, too.
Now, I don't love answer D, for the same reasons already mentioned in this thread, and I think for the same reason you called it "half correct." My prephrase was "European economies are not as successful as they could be". Answer D isn't perfect, but it doesn't reek nearly so much as answer C does. It's the best of the bunch, which is all we are supposed to be looking for anyway, so I'll take it and hold my nose a little if I have to.
I hope my response was not only pungent, but cogent! Enjoy!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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