- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#23066
Complete Question Explanation
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author recommends that governments subsidize high-quality day care because subsidies are the only way to ensure such day care is available to everyone, and governments have an obligation to improve the well-being of all children in society. Do you notice a discrepancy between the principle advanced in the first sentence of the stimulus and its conclusion? What if the wide-spread availability of day care only benefited adults? Because the government's obligation towards children would not be met in that case, financing day care may be unnecessary. In other words, the argument assumes that making day care available to everyone will benefit at least some children. This, essentially, is answer choice (D).
Answer choice (A): At first glance, this is an attractive answer choice. If the only governments that take an interest in the well-being of children are those that subsidize high-quality day care, and each government must do all that it can to improve the well-being of the children in the society it governs, then subsidizing day care would be a logical conclusion. This, however, is not a Justify the Conclusion question! Our job in an Assumption question is not to prove the conclusion, but rather to find an answer choice that would disprove the conclusion if removed from it. What if it were possible to take an interest in the well-being of children without subsidizing high-quality day care? This would not necessarily weaken the argument, because subsidizing day care could still be a valuable practice. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Even if government subsidy of day care led to the elimination of benefits for adults, the author is only concerned with the well-being of children. While this answer choice would lend additional support to subsidizing high-quality day care, it is not essential to the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): It is a given that day care would only be available to everyone if it's subsidized. Restricting the coverage of such a subsidy is not essential to the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. It is necessary that at least some children benefit from day care. If none of them do, the government initiative would not satisfy the goal of improving the well-being of children.
Answer choice (E): The relative efficiency of government-provided services is irrelevant to this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.
Assumption. The correct answer choice is (D)
The author recommends that governments subsidize high-quality day care because subsidies are the only way to ensure such day care is available to everyone, and governments have an obligation to improve the well-being of all children in society. Do you notice a discrepancy between the principle advanced in the first sentence of the stimulus and its conclusion? What if the wide-spread availability of day care only benefited adults? Because the government's obligation towards children would not be met in that case, financing day care may be unnecessary. In other words, the argument assumes that making day care available to everyone will benefit at least some children. This, essentially, is answer choice (D).
Answer choice (A): At first glance, this is an attractive answer choice. If the only governments that take an interest in the well-being of children are those that subsidize high-quality day care, and each government must do all that it can to improve the well-being of the children in the society it governs, then subsidizing day care would be a logical conclusion. This, however, is not a Justify the Conclusion question! Our job in an Assumption question is not to prove the conclusion, but rather to find an answer choice that would disprove the conclusion if removed from it. What if it were possible to take an interest in the well-being of children without subsidizing high-quality day care? This would not necessarily weaken the argument, because subsidizing day care could still be a valuable practice. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): Even if government subsidy of day care led to the elimination of benefits for adults, the author is only concerned with the well-being of children. While this answer choice would lend additional support to subsidizing high-quality day care, it is not essential to the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): It is a given that day care would only be available to everyone if it's subsidized. Restricting the coverage of such a subsidy is not essential to the conclusion. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. It is necessary that at least some children benefit from day care. If none of them do, the government initiative would not satisfy the goal of improving the well-being of children.
Answer choice (E): The relative efficiency of government-provided services is irrelevant to this argument. This answer choice is incorrect.