- Thu Jun 09, 2016 6:15 pm
#26371
Emily, this is another good question and actually illustrates a fascinating nuance of Must Be True questions. The question stem for this problem reads "The city leader's statements, if true, provide the most support for which of the following?"
Here the key words are "provide the most support for." Contrast this wording with that of other Must Be True questions that ask "If the statements above are true, which of the following must also be true?" The slight difference in degree of emphasis actually makes a difference in questions such as these. In the former situation, that which we are discussing here, we are looking for something that is most "strongly supported." In other words, there will be direct explicit evidence backing up the correct answer choice. However, I often tell students that in these "strongly supported" supported situations, sometimes you will be able to come up with possible, though unlikely, confounding circumstances, as you have brought up here. These are kinda the "but what if the sun doesn't rise tomorrow" possibilities.
In the stimulus, the aspect of the two plans discussed vis-à-vis the effects of their adoption is how many jobs they will create. In the case of the automobile plant, regardless of how much money such a plant brings in, we know that spending a certain amount of money to bring it is "reasonable" because of the jobs that result. In other words, the reasonableness of the expenditure for the automobile plant is directly related to how many jobs it will create. Since we also know that the tourism plan will create just as many jobs as the automobile plant but cost less money to enact, the direct relationship between the amount of money spent and the amount of jobs created guarantees that adoption of the tourism plan is warranted.
Let me illustrate:
Given that the number of jobs created is the ultimate metric by which we measure whether a plan is reasonable, suppose the automobile plant costs
$100,000 but will bring in 10,000 jobs
now suppose the tourism plan costs
$5,000 but will bring in 10,000 jobs
Since the very fact that spending $100,000 to bring in 10,000 jobs IS reasonable, it must be true that spending $5,000 to achieve the same result is also reasonable.
There is direct evidence for (D) in the stimulus, so it is the credited response. I hope this explanation helps clear up your question. Please reply if you would like further explanation.