- Thu Apr 07, 2016 6:58 pm
#22852
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True-CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author begins by speculating that the recent recession was caused by household indebtedness, but quickly shows that such a hypothesis, if true, would lead to contradictory results. Therefore, there must have been an alternate cause for the recession. Answer choice (A) summarizes this conclusion quite well, and is therefore the correct answer.
The key to answering this question quickly and efficiently is to avoid getting distracted by the abundance of detail and focus instead on the key words that point to the conclusion. The language of the first sentence in the stimulus prefigures a conclusion that is the direct opposite of what "some theorists regard" as the cause of the recent recession. Also, the word "admittedly" in the beginning of the second sentence indicates that the author is exploring a hypothesis that will ultimately be rejected, and is thus irrelevant to understanding the main point of the argument.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. See discussion above.
Answer choice (B): It is unclear whether low-income households succeeded in paying off their debts: we can draw no such inference from the facts provided in the stimulus. If anything, since money is not lent to those without assets, low-income households may not have had much debt to pay off after all. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): If, as a matter of fact, affluent people owed most of the household debt, it is unclear why they would have increased their spending during the recession. Rational people would have done exactly the opposite. There is no information in the stimulus that can lead to such a conclusion.
Answer choice (D): The author only concludes that household indebtedness had little impact on the recession, not on the economy in general. Having a solid grasp of the precise nature and scope of the conclusion is key to avoiding such exaggerated answers.
Answer choice (E): What people did prior to the recent recession is immaterial to this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.
Must Be True-CE. The correct answer choice is (A)
The author begins by speculating that the recent recession was caused by household indebtedness, but quickly shows that such a hypothesis, if true, would lead to contradictory results. Therefore, there must have been an alternate cause for the recession. Answer choice (A) summarizes this conclusion quite well, and is therefore the correct answer.
The key to answering this question quickly and efficiently is to avoid getting distracted by the abundance of detail and focus instead on the key words that point to the conclusion. The language of the first sentence in the stimulus prefigures a conclusion that is the direct opposite of what "some theorists regard" as the cause of the recent recession. Also, the word "admittedly" in the beginning of the second sentence indicates that the author is exploring a hypothesis that will ultimately be rejected, and is thus irrelevant to understanding the main point of the argument.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. See discussion above.
Answer choice (B): It is unclear whether low-income households succeeded in paying off their debts: we can draw no such inference from the facts provided in the stimulus. If anything, since money is not lent to those without assets, low-income households may not have had much debt to pay off after all. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): If, as a matter of fact, affluent people owed most of the household debt, it is unclear why they would have increased their spending during the recession. Rational people would have done exactly the opposite. There is no information in the stimulus that can lead to such a conclusion.
Answer choice (D): The author only concludes that household indebtedness had little impact on the recession, not on the economy in general. Having a solid grasp of the precise nature and scope of the conclusion is key to avoiding such exaggerated answers.
Answer choice (E): What people did prior to the recent recession is immaterial to this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.