- Fri Jul 20, 2018 10:32 pm
#48200
A student emailed me recently to ask about this question (specifically for help deciphering (D) and eliminating (B) and (E)), and I thought my reply might help others who're struggling with this one. So I'm posting it below:
This is a tricky question, but I think we can get to the bottom of it. Honestly, when I read it the first thing that struck me was the disconnect between reducing the trade deficit, which we know weakens the economy, and directly helping the economy. There’s a gap there! That is, changing the cause of some other effect doesn’t guarantee that the effect itself will be altered in a predictable way, since introducing that new element could theoretically lead to other issues related to the effect. I’ll translate that: the trade deficit hurts the economy, but introducing regulations to reduce the deficit (lessen the cause) doesn’t guarantee that the economy will improve as a result, since we don’t know the relationship between those regulations and the economy itself.
It’d be like someone saying that smoking cigarettes causes health issues, so removing a smoker’s lungs, or replacing their cigarettes with sticks of dynamite, to prevent them from smoking will improve their health. Probably not, right? Same deal here: the regulations might remove the cause of some negative thing, but without knowing how they might directly affect that end piece we can’t say for sure what outcome we’ll get!
And that’s (D) in a nutshell: one effect of regulations is to reduce the trade deficit, but that positive outcome (deficit reduction) could be offset by other effects of those regulations and thus leave the economy no better than at present. That’s the gap I mention above.
(B) and (E) on the other hand both fail for the same reason: neither is an accurate depiction of what the argument says! At no point does the author indicate that reducing the deficit is “the only means” of strengthening the economy (it’s just noted as something that weakens the economy and improving it is thus believed to help) so that gets rid of (B), and the entire argument is dealing with individual regulations, not the whole set: “every regulation” and “each of the proposed regulations,” so we never go from the whole group to then treating them individually, and thus (E) is out.
I hope that helps!
Finally, khodi to your question about solving by process of elimination: yes, that is often the most powerful way to attack questions, particularly in the latter portions of an LR section where questions are at their toughest! The right answer doesn't have to be something that's ideal for you or that you would have supplied if given the chance...it simply has to be a better choice than the other four. And in this case answer choice (D) most certainly is!
Jon Denning
PowerScore Test Preparation
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