- Sat Feb 21, 2015 12:00 am
#73432
Complete Question Explanation
Principle, Cannot Be True. The correct answer choice is (E).
In the stimulus we are given certain rules set forth by the Constitution of Country F. Those rules can be diagrammed conditionally, as follows:
Gov Sells State Owned Entity Highest Price & Citizens Have Majority Ownership for At Least One Year
We are asked to select the answer that will require a violation of those rules. This is a form of Cannot Be True question, and the most common form of Cannot Be True is where we are given a conditional claim and we are to select an answer where the Sufficient Condition occurs and the Necessary Condition does not. So we must look for a situation where the government will definitely sell a state-owned entity but must either accept a price less than the highest one they could have gotten on the open market OR they will be unable to guarantee that the citizens have majority ownership for at least one year after the sale. Pay close attention - we are not looking for a situation where the government MIGHT violate the rules, but one where they MUST violate them.
Answer choice (A): There is no indication here that the government must sell to the corporation in question, nor is there any indication that if they do they will fail to meet the necessary conditions. Noncitizens having a minority share is not a problem.
Answer choice (B): Again, there is no indication that the rule will be broken in this case, as the location of the corporation's operations is not an element of the rules.
Answer choice (C): Nothing in this answer suggests that the government must sell to World Oil. It is possible that that there is a higher bidder, and that the highest bid will come from a company that the government can guarantee will be majority owned by the citizens.
Answer choice (D): Like answer A, noncitizens owning a minority share is irrelevant to our argument, so long as the government can guarantee majority ownership by citizens. There is no reason here to conclude that the rule must be broken.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have a situation where the Necessary Conditions become mutually exclusive, and thus cannot both be met. If the government insists on the restrictions to guarantee citizens will own the majority of the company, they will not get the highest price they could have gotten on the open market, but if they demand the highest price then they cannot guarantee the majority ownership to the citizens. One way or another, the rule must be violated in this instance.
Principle, Cannot Be True. The correct answer choice is (E).
In the stimulus we are given certain rules set forth by the Constitution of Country F. Those rules can be diagrammed conditionally, as follows:
Gov Sells State Owned Entity Highest Price & Citizens Have Majority Ownership for At Least One Year
We are asked to select the answer that will require a violation of those rules. This is a form of Cannot Be True question, and the most common form of Cannot Be True is where we are given a conditional claim and we are to select an answer where the Sufficient Condition occurs and the Necessary Condition does not. So we must look for a situation where the government will definitely sell a state-owned entity but must either accept a price less than the highest one they could have gotten on the open market OR they will be unable to guarantee that the citizens have majority ownership for at least one year after the sale. Pay close attention - we are not looking for a situation where the government MIGHT violate the rules, but one where they MUST violate them.
Answer choice (A): There is no indication here that the government must sell to the corporation in question, nor is there any indication that if they do they will fail to meet the necessary conditions. Noncitizens having a minority share is not a problem.
Answer choice (B): Again, there is no indication that the rule will be broken in this case, as the location of the corporation's operations is not an element of the rules.
Answer choice (C): Nothing in this answer suggests that the government must sell to World Oil. It is possible that that there is a higher bidder, and that the highest bid will come from a company that the government can guarantee will be majority owned by the citizens.
Answer choice (D): Like answer A, noncitizens owning a minority share is irrelevant to our argument, so long as the government can guarantee majority ownership by citizens. There is no reason here to conclude that the rule must be broken.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Here we have a situation where the Necessary Conditions become mutually exclusive, and thus cannot both be met. If the government insists on the restrictions to guarantee citizens will own the majority of the company, they will not get the highest price they could have gotten on the open market, but if they demand the highest price then they cannot guarantee the majority ownership to the citizens. One way or another, the rule must be violated in this instance.