- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#26986
Complete Question Explanation
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This conditional Justify question concludes that it is unlikely that real wages will increase significantly in the near future. This is based on the idea that for real wages to increase significantly productivity must increase notably, and currently this country’s businesses are investing very little in new technology (and this pattern is likely to continue). Clearly what must be connected here is the idea that if a country invests very little in new technology (or does not invest a lot in new technology) then productivity will not increase notably. This can be diagrammed as follows:
Answer choice (A): The conclusion is about the near future, so the trends of the past are unrelated to the argument here.
Answer choice (B): You cannot know that a number of workers will acquire the skills to use whatever new technology may develop, so this answer choice cannot be thought to prove the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): Again, the conclusion is about the “near future” so this answer choice is not related to it (“sooner or later” is not the same as the “near future,” and if it were this answer choice would actually attack the conclusion).
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If productivity increasing is necessary for wages to increase, and productivity requires substantial investment in new technology (which is not happening), then real wages cannot increase in the near future.
Answer choice (E): Even if the new technology that is being invested in is not yielding an increase in productivity, that is not enough to conclude that productivity in not increasing for other reasons. So even with this answer choice it is possible that the conclusion is incorrect (if productivity could still be increasing for other reasons, then real wages could still increase in the near future and the conclusion may not be true).
Justify the Conclusion—SN. The correct answer choice is (D)
This conditional Justify question concludes that it is unlikely that real wages will increase significantly in the near future. This is based on the idea that for real wages to increase significantly productivity must increase notably, and currently this country’s businesses are investing very little in new technology (and this pattern is likely to continue). Clearly what must be connected here is the idea that if a country invests very little in new technology (or does not invest a lot in new technology) then productivity will not increase notably. This can be diagrammed as follows:
- Invest heavily new tech Productivity increase Real wages increase significantly
Answer choice (A): The conclusion is about the near future, so the trends of the past are unrelated to the argument here.
Answer choice (B): You cannot know that a number of workers will acquire the skills to use whatever new technology may develop, so this answer choice cannot be thought to prove the conclusion.
Answer choice (C): Again, the conclusion is about the “near future” so this answer choice is not related to it (“sooner or later” is not the same as the “near future,” and if it were this answer choice would actually attack the conclusion).
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. If productivity increasing is necessary for wages to increase, and productivity requires substantial investment in new technology (which is not happening), then real wages cannot increase in the near future.
Answer choice (E): Even if the new technology that is being invested in is not yielding an increase in productivity, that is not enough to conclude that productivity in not increasing for other reasons. So even with this answer choice it is possible that the conclusion is incorrect (if productivity could still be increasing for other reasons, then real wages could still increase in the near future and the conclusion may not be true).