- Tue Oct 28, 2014 8:03 pm
#17197
Please explain this assumption question- how is answer choice B correct? Please take me through the whole process of how I should have got the answer.
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Adam Tyson wrote: ↑Mon Sep 12, 2016 6:32 pm Hey guys, let me see if I can help out here. Nicholas' explanation is on point here, and I am assuming you both read it, so I'll just try to expand on it some.Hi,
The purpose of the question is to prove (justify) the conclusion - we have to show that the auto repair industry is absolutely, definitely not an example of a properly functioning free market.
Answer C falls short - so what if you can't always get a written estimate? The issue is whether you can get the price, but that could be from advertising, or perhaps from oral estimates, right? A lack of written estimates is only a partial problem, not a justifying problem, because there could be other ways to get those prices.
Answer B, however, crushes it. In the stimulus we are told that in a properly functioning free market, EACH prospective buyer must be able to get that info and make that comparison of price to worth. If there is even one single buyer who cannot do that, then we haven't met the definition, and it is NOT a properly functioning free market. Answer B tells us that SOME people cannot make that comparison (because they do not know what to compare the price to - they do not know the true worth of the repairs). If even one person cannot make the comparison, the conclusion is justified, and B ensures us that there is at least one such person. Boom!
Does that clear things up? Let us know!
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