- Mon Jul 11, 2016 12:43 pm
#26976
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (D)
In this stimulus, the author provides a single premise: since many expenses don’t occur monthly, accounting based on monthly expenses can cause a business to overexpand. From this premise the author draws the conclusion that use of a cash-flow statement is critical for all businesses.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Since it has not been made explicit, we should probably look for the answer choice which links the use of a cash-flow statement with protection against the author’s concerns about monthly expenses. Answer choice (D) does exactly that: if a cash-flow statement is the only way to track both types of expenses, then the author is justified in concluding that the use of cash-flow statements is critical.
Answer choice (A) fails to strengthen the argument because the expenses which concern the author are the non-monthly expenses. Answer choice (B) fails to create the needed link, and the author’s discussion is about avoiding overexpansion, not responding to it. Answer choice (C) fails to even mention cash-flow, so there is no way that this answer choice could provide the link that we are seeking. The same can be said for answer choice (E); we know that we need the answer choice which somehow points out the necessity of a cash-flow statement, so we should be fairly confident when ruling out both answer choices (C) and (E).
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (D)
In this stimulus, the author provides a single premise: since many expenses don’t occur monthly, accounting based on monthly expenses can cause a business to overexpand. From this premise the author draws the conclusion that use of a cash-flow statement is critical for all businesses.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Since it has not been made explicit, we should probably look for the answer choice which links the use of a cash-flow statement with protection against the author’s concerns about monthly expenses. Answer choice (D) does exactly that: if a cash-flow statement is the only way to track both types of expenses, then the author is justified in concluding that the use of cash-flow statements is critical.
Answer choice (A) fails to strengthen the argument because the expenses which concern the author are the non-monthly expenses. Answer choice (B) fails to create the needed link, and the author’s discussion is about avoiding overexpansion, not responding to it. Answer choice (C) fails to even mention cash-flow, so there is no way that this answer choice could provide the link that we are seeking. The same can be said for answer choice (E); we know that we need the answer choice which somehow points out the necessity of a cash-flow statement, so we should be fairly confident when ruling out both answer choices (C) and (E).