- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#24032
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A)
The conclusion of this Stimulus is the negative of the theory that household debt causes recession. Again, this is typical of the LSAT, stating what “some theorists” believe then concluding the opposite.
There is also a cause-effect relationship stated in this stimulus, although it is stated negatively. The cause is household debt and the effect is recession. To weaken CE relationships, you show an alternative cause, an effect with no cause, cause with no effect, or a reversal of order.
The Question Stem reveals that this is a weaken question type.
Answer Choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The Stimulus tells us that decreased spending may be a cause of recession, and in this answer choice, if the household debt of the middle-income families had reached a level that would have caused reduced spending, this may have been a cause for the recession.
Answer Choice (B): This answer should be eliminated as a “so what?” answer. The Stimulus does not address the level of household debt relative to the level of household assets, as this answer choice does. Having more household debt than assets held by households may in fact contribute to a recession, but we do not know this relationship.
Answer Choice (C): This answer should be eliminated. Answer choice (C) could in fact strengthen the conclusion that household debt is not the cause. This is where the negative expression of the causal relationship can be tricky and troubling. The decrease in spending by the lower class is household debt, and thus it is not an alternate cause.
Answer Choice (D): This is a “so what?” answer. So what if the affluent in a recession borrow money only to purchase assets? That has nothing to do with the conclusion that it is not household debt that causes recessions.
Answer Choice (E): This answer could strengthen the conclusion, and thus should be eliminated. If household debt is the category of debt least likely to affect the economy, it probably would not be likely to cause a recession. Additionally, answer choice (E) is a restatement of the cause and effect relationship, and thus it cannot weaken it.
Weaken. The correct answer choice is (A)
The conclusion of this Stimulus is the negative of the theory that household debt causes recession. Again, this is typical of the LSAT, stating what “some theorists” believe then concluding the opposite.
- Premise: money is not lent to those without assets.
- Conclusion: Household debt is not the cause of the recession.
There is also a cause-effect relationship stated in this stimulus, although it is stated negatively. The cause is household debt and the effect is recession. To weaken CE relationships, you show an alternative cause, an effect with no cause, cause with no effect, or a reversal of order.
The Question Stem reveals that this is a weaken question type.
Answer Choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. The Stimulus tells us that decreased spending may be a cause of recession, and in this answer choice, if the household debt of the middle-income families had reached a level that would have caused reduced spending, this may have been a cause for the recession.
Answer Choice (B): This answer should be eliminated as a “so what?” answer. The Stimulus does not address the level of household debt relative to the level of household assets, as this answer choice does. Having more household debt than assets held by households may in fact contribute to a recession, but we do not know this relationship.
Answer Choice (C): This answer should be eliminated. Answer choice (C) could in fact strengthen the conclusion that household debt is not the cause. This is where the negative expression of the causal relationship can be tricky and troubling. The decrease in spending by the lower class is household debt, and thus it is not an alternate cause.
Answer Choice (D): This is a “so what?” answer. So what if the affluent in a recession borrow money only to purchase assets? That has nothing to do with the conclusion that it is not household debt that causes recessions.
Answer Choice (E): This answer could strengthen the conclusion, and thus should be eliminated. If household debt is the category of debt least likely to affect the economy, it probably would not be likely to cause a recession. Additionally, answer choice (E) is a restatement of the cause and effect relationship, and thus it cannot weaken it.