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 sunj289
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#9492
Hi,
LR section 1, Q 17:

I'm having a difficult time understanding why D is necessarily the correct answer. Perhaps i'm not understanding the stimulus correctly, but I'm just not able to fully grasp this problem.

Thanks in advance!
 Ron Gore
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#9503
Thank you for your question, sunj289!

This is a Resolve the Paradox question. To attack this question, you first identify the contradiction. Then you look for an answer choice that could permit or cause both seemingly contradictory facts to be true.

Here, the contradictory situation is that even though a large amount of economic activity occurs in these large malls, the increase in the local economy is smaller than the total amount of economic activity in the malls. This situation runs counter to the expectation described in the first clause of the first sentence, that you would expect all of that economic activity in the mall to boost the local economy.

This stated expectation is based on an assumption, that the presence of the mall creates new economic activity in the area, and doesn't simply siphon off economic activity from the local economy that would have occurred even in the absence of the mall. Notice that the stimulus refers to "economic activity," a broad idea, and not simply dollars spent by consumers; the incorrect answers will play around with this broad concept of economic activity.

Answer choice (D) helps to resolve the apparent discrepancy by revealing that most of the money spent in the mall is money that would have been spent in the same community even in the absence of the mall. So, while the economic activity is new to the mall, it is not new to the community. That is why the increase in the local economy is much smaller. The further implication of this answer is that other businesses in the community are worse off, because the money that used to be spent in their stores is now being spent in the mall.

In looking at the other answer choices, remember that an incorrect answer in a resolve the paradox question will: explain only one side of the paradox, misstate the facts, or try to explain some other aspect of how the facts relate to each other that is immaterial to the discrepancy.

Answer (A) misstates the facts, because it implies there is not a large amount of economic activity at the mall.

Answer (B) explains the expectation that the opening of the mall would boost the local economy, but doesn't explain the contradiction between that expectation and reality.

Answer (C), like (B), explains the expectation that the opening of the mall would boost the local economy, but doesn't explain the contradiction.

Answer (E), like (A), attacks the facts, by implying there is not a large amount of economic activity, i.e., new well-paying jobs, at the mall.

Hope that helps,

Ron
 srcline@noctrl.edu
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#23700
Hello Ron,

Thankyou for your explanation, especially with the discrepancy and the incorrect answer choices. However, I am still having a hard time understanding why B is not correct. In your explanation you stated that it only explains the half of the discrepancy and that it doesn't explain the contradiction b/w the expectation and reality.

So my thought processes on B was that: Given that tourists are visiting these malls and spending most of their money at these malls, wouldn't that explain why the total amount of the econ. activity is higher in these malls. And also explain why the increase in the local econ is smaller b/c tourists are not visiting other attractions in the local community like other businesses, b/c they came specifically for that mall.

Is the discrepancy getting at a long term impact? If so I don't see where that is hinted in the stimulus . I thought D was too ambiguous.

Thankyou
Sarah
 David Boyle
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#23789
srcline@noctrl.edu wrote:Hello Ron,

Thankyou for your explanation, especially with the discrepancy and the incorrect answer choices. However, I am still having a hard time understanding why B is not correct. In your explanation you stated that it only explains the half of the discrepancy and that it doesn't explain the contradiction b/w the expectation and reality.

So my thought processes on B was that: Given that tourists are visiting these malls and spending most of their money at these malls, wouldn't that explain why the total amount of the econ. activity is higher in these malls. And also explain why the increase in the local econ is smaller b/c tourists are not visiting other attractions in the local community like other businesses, b/c they came specifically for that mall.

Is the discrepancy getting at a long term impact? If so I don't see where that is hinted in the stimulus . I thought D was too ambiguous.

Thankyou
Sarah
Hello,

There is nothing about a long-term impact, especially.
B is bad enough that it is almost an Opposite answer. You want an answer that deals with both sides of the paradox, but answer B makes it plain that the local economy is hardly hurt by the mall at all. ("tourists who are drawn specifically by the mall and who would not have visited the community had that mall not been built.") So the rest of the local economy isn't really hurt, then why doesn't the economic boost from the mall help the community as much as it should?

David
 akanshalsat
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#59095
Hello! Still very very confused as to why B doesnt work?
 Malila Robinson
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#62990
Hi akanshalsat,
Can you describe where your confusion is coming from in a bit more detail? We are happy to try to explain it in a different way than what has already been done if you can give us a little more information on what part of our previous responses did not work for you.
-Malila
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 nicizle
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#109766
I also am unable to wrap my head around why B is wrong, and I especially don't see how it could go as far as an "opposite answer" as referenced above.

If tourists are visiting a local mall, and only that mall, how does that not explain the discrepancy between local economy vs mall economy? My thought process matched exactly what srcline@noctrl.edu outlined.

Are we supposed to assume that a boost to the mall economy would impact the local economy positively? Or that the tourists in AC B would be interacting with other businesses to boost the local economy? I'm just not sure what I'm missing here that makes B wrong.

I'm just not seeing why B is wrong or why D is right. These questions truly exhaust me.
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 nicizle
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#109767
David Boyle wrote: Mon May 02, 2016 6:04 pm
srcline@noctrl.edu wrote:Hello Ron,

Thankyou for your explanation, especially with the discrepancy and the incorrect answer choices. However, I am still having a hard time understanding why B is not correct. In your explanation you stated that it only explains the half of the discrepancy and that it doesn't explain the contradiction b/w the expectation and reality.

So my thought processes on B was that: Given that tourists are visiting these malls and spending most of their money at these malls, wouldn't that explain why the total amount of the econ. activity is higher in these malls. And also explain why the increase in the local econ is smaller b/c tourists are not visiting other attractions in the local community like other businesses, b/c they came specifically for that mall.

Is the discrepancy getting at a long term impact? If so I don't see where that is hinted in the stimulus . I thought D was too ambiguous.

Thankyou
Sarah
Hello,

There is nothing about a long-term impact, especially.
B is bad enough that it is almost an Opposite answer. You want an answer that deals with both sides of the paradox, but answer B makes it plain that the local economy is hardly hurt by the mall at all. ("tourists who are drawn specifically by the mall and who would not have visited the community had that mall not been built.") So the rest of the local economy isn't really hurt, then why doesn't the economic boost from the mall help the community as much as it should?

David
"but answer B makes it plain that the local economy is hardly hurt by the mall at all"... isn't that what we want? Something that explains why there is profound impact on the local economy? I'm not really understanding how this explanation disproves B... I'd appreciate some clarity.
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 nicizle
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#109768
nicizle wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 1:34 am
David Boyle wrote: Mon May 02, 2016 6:04 pm
srcline@noctrl.edu wrote:Hello Ron,

Thankyou for your explanation, especially with the discrepancy and the incorrect answer choices. However, I am still having a hard time understanding why B is not correct. In your explanation you stated that it only explains the half of the discrepancy and that it doesn't explain the contradiction b/w the expectation and reality.

So my thought processes on B was that: Given that tourists are visiting these malls and spending most of their money at these malls, wouldn't that explain why the total amount of the econ. activity is higher in these malls. And also explain why the increase in the local econ is smaller b/c tourists are not visiting other attractions in the local community like other businesses, b/c they came specifically for that mall.

Is the discrepancy getting at a long term impact? If so I don't see where that is hinted in the stimulus . I thought D was too ambiguous.

Thankyou
Sarah
Hello,

There is nothing about a long-term impact, especially.
B is bad enough that it is almost an Opposite answer. You want an answer that deals with both sides of the paradox, but answer B makes it plain that the local economy is hardly hurt by the mall at all. ("tourists who are drawn specifically by the mall and who would not have visited the community had that mall not been built.") So the rest of the local economy isn't really hurt, then why doesn't the economic boost from the mall help the community as much as it should?

David
"but answer B makes it plain that the local economy is hardly hurt by the mall at all"... isn't that what we want? Something that explains why there is profound impact on the local economy? I'm not really understanding how this explanation disproves B... I'd appreciate some clarity.
as a correction, I meant *NO profound impact.
 Adam Tyson
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#110593
Answer B is telling us that most of the business in a mall is new business in the community. A mall adds to the local economy by bringing in a whole new source of business. That's the exact opposite of what we need the answer to do. The stimulus is saying that the business conducted in a mall does not all add to the local economy. The explanation could that at least some of the business conducted in the mall is business that would otherwise have happened elsewhere in the community if the mall wasn't built, or that the presence of the mall generally discourages or reduces business outside the mall.

To illustrate the stimulus, consider these numbers:

1. The mall did $5,000,000 in business in the first year it was open

2. The local economy grew by only $2,000,000 in that same year

What the heck? How did that happen? Where did the other $3,000,000 go?

The answer is that business elsewhere in the community shrank. Maybe the mall took business away from the old shopping district? Answer D provides that missing bit of information.

Answer B is saying that a mall would NOT have much, if any, negative impact on the rest of the local economy. Most, perhaps all, of that mall business would be new business that should have added to the local economy. That makes the whole mystery even more mysterious, because we have no answer to where all that money went. Why didn't the economy grow by closer to $5,000,000? We need an answer that more directly tells us that business declines outside a mall after a mall opens.

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