- Wed Jan 16, 2019 7:30 pm
#61872
Nihal,
The stimulus is telling us that continuous maintenance is far less expensive than radical reconstruction. That alone doesn't tell us much - a BMW may be far less expensive than a Lambo, but that doesn't mean I'll be buying either one! However, the stimulus also says that failing to perform continuous maintenance leads to requiring radical reconstruction. So if you don't do the far less expensive thing, you WILL have to do something more expensive. Thus, unlike in my hypothetical about luxury automobiles, there's no way to avoid SOME expense here! So, if one of these things needs to be done, it makes a lot more sense to do continuous maintenance, since it's far less expensive. Yet...the last sentence says that it almost never happens. Why?
Well, whoever is making decisions must have some other idea in mind besides the expense, because the less expensive of two alternatives (where at least one of them always has to be done) isn't being chosen. You'll be looking for an answer that explains a motivation not related to expense that may cause someone not to choose that alternative. Answer choice (E) introduces the idea that there may not be enough urgency in the case for maintenance to get people to employ continuous maintenance, so, even though it's less expensive, people neglect it. This helps explain why people are making the apparently silly and paradoxical decision of wasting money!
Robert Carroll