- Tue Mar 24, 2015 11:00 pm
#35018
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14168)
The correct answer choice is (B)
The plan described in passage B involves selectively cutting the water to a few residences with
outstanding water bills (lines 42-48), and our job is to determine how the author of passage A would
view such a solution. Note that the plan entails discretionary enforcement, which is not directly
addressed in passage A. Nevertheless, we can draw parallels between discretionary enforcement and
discretionary nonenforcement in order to arrive at a suitable prephrase.
Answer choice (A): There is no reason why the author of passage A would delay implementing the
plan until after the legislature’s annual appropriations hearing.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. According to passage A, the main advantage
of discretionary nonenforcement results from reducing the social costs of overinclusion. The same
rationale probably applies to discretionary enforcement: cutting the water to a few select households
reduces the social costs of doing the same with all delinquent households.
Answer choice (C): Passage B contains no evidence that the water department has been enforcing
overinclusive rules to the letter.
Answer choice (D): It is the author of passage B, not passage A, who prefers placing liens on the
properties owned by those who are late paying their bills. Always be sure to understand whose
perspective the question stem is asking you to adopt, if any.
Answer choice (E): While this recommendation seems perfectly reasonable, there is no evidence that
the author of passage A would agree with it. On the contrary: as someone who regards very specific
laws as inherently underinclusive, she is unlikely to embrace the alternative proposal described here.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14168)
The correct answer choice is (B)
The plan described in passage B involves selectively cutting the water to a few residences with
outstanding water bills (lines 42-48), and our job is to determine how the author of passage A would
view such a solution. Note that the plan entails discretionary enforcement, which is not directly
addressed in passage A. Nevertheless, we can draw parallels between discretionary enforcement and
discretionary nonenforcement in order to arrive at a suitable prephrase.
Answer choice (A): There is no reason why the author of passage A would delay implementing the
plan until after the legislature’s annual appropriations hearing.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice. According to passage A, the main advantage
of discretionary nonenforcement results from reducing the social costs of overinclusion. The same
rationale probably applies to discretionary enforcement: cutting the water to a few select households
reduces the social costs of doing the same with all delinquent households.
Answer choice (C): Passage B contains no evidence that the water department has been enforcing
overinclusive rules to the letter.
Answer choice (D): It is the author of passage B, not passage A, who prefers placing liens on the
properties owned by those who are late paying their bills. Always be sure to understand whose
perspective the question stem is asking you to adopt, if any.
Answer choice (E): While this recommendation seems perfectly reasonable, there is no evidence that
the author of passage A would agree with it. On the contrary: as someone who regards very specific
laws as inherently underinclusive, she is unlikely to embrace the alternative proposal described here.