- Mon Jun 01, 2020 2:00 pm
#75873
Hi LSAT Learner,
There are a couple things wrong with answer choice D here. First, while we know from the stimulus that there is a problem with the firms' "competing successfully" with foreign machinery firms, we do not know whether their inability to compete successfully necessarily means they will "go out of business." Maybe the domestic firms will simply limp along being less successful (in relation to the foreign ones), but won't entirely go out of business. So that new terminology in answer choice D is problematic.
Second, and more importantly, answer choice D doesn't fit the logical relationship the stimulus establishes between protection and ability to compete successfully. The stimulus establishes that protection from competition will never be sufficient to allow machinery firms to compete successfully, because, if it were, that would've happened already within the ten years they were protected. What answer choice D says is that protection is necessary ("unless" being a necessary condition indicator) for the firms to survive. That's a different logical statement than to say protection is not sufficient. In other words, just because something is not sufficient doesn't automatically mean it's necessary.
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant
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