Zach Foreman wrote:t_m,
You are on the right track. I would use the assumption negation technique.
From what I understand, I don't think the assumption negation technique works here because this is not an assumption question, but a justify the conclusion question. With JTC questions, the difficult part is identifying the missing premise so negating doesn't help identify the missing link. With assumption questions, you're looking for the implicit assumption, so it is more difficult to tell which assumption truly matters, and so negating is more helpful there. That's at least how I understand it.
I originally misread the stimulus, which I found very tricky. It is easy to confuse the supply and demand for the parts and the supply and demand for the cars themselves. When I read the conclusion, I didn't catch that it was referring to the entire car, so when I looked through the answers none really appealed. I chose D, but I was quite unsure. Looking back I think I just needed to read more closely.