- Fri Apr 15, 2016 2:53 pm
#23134
Complete Question Explanation
Flaw in the reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus conditionally concludes that if the average age of prosperous nations' populations continue to rise, then their national savings rates will decrease. This is supported by the fact that older people have fewer reasons to save than younger people.
Answer choice (A) The argument need not specify the reasons that younger people have for saving money. Nor must it identify which of those reasons is the strongest. The fact that the stimulus does neither of these does not make the argument flawed.
Answer choice (B) It goes completely off-topic about having a negative savings rate, which the stimulus never mentions.
Answer choice (C) While it is true that the stimulus does not try to prove that the average age of the observed population is rising, the conclusion is a conditional one. That is, the stimulus merely concludes that if the average age is rising, the savings rate will fall. As such, the stimulus does not need to prove that the average age is in fact rising.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus supports its conclusion with a single fact—that older people tend to have fewer reasons to save than younger people. However, even if one has fewer reasons to save, those reasons may be more salient than the reasons one has during youth. For example, an older person may save in order to provide a better future for kids.
Answer choice (E) The distinction between after-tax and before-tax income is not relevant to the argument in the stimulus, so this answer choice is incorrect.
Flaw in the reasoning. The correct answer choice is (D)
The stimulus conditionally concludes that if the average age of prosperous nations' populations continue to rise, then their national savings rates will decrease. This is supported by the fact that older people have fewer reasons to save than younger people.
Answer choice (A) The argument need not specify the reasons that younger people have for saving money. Nor must it identify which of those reasons is the strongest. The fact that the stimulus does neither of these does not make the argument flawed.
Answer choice (B) It goes completely off-topic about having a negative savings rate, which the stimulus never mentions.
Answer choice (C) While it is true that the stimulus does not try to prove that the average age of the observed population is rising, the conclusion is a conditional one. That is, the stimulus merely concludes that if the average age is rising, the savings rate will fall. As such, the stimulus does not need to prove that the average age is in fact rising.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. The stimulus supports its conclusion with a single fact—that older people tend to have fewer reasons to save than younger people. However, even if one has fewer reasons to save, those reasons may be more salient than the reasons one has during youth. For example, an older person may save in order to provide a better future for kids.
Answer choice (E) The distinction between after-tax and before-tax income is not relevant to the argument in the stimulus, so this answer choice is incorrect.