- Mon Jan 20, 2014 12:00 am
#64915
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (E)
The question stem that follows the stimulus is a strengthen question, so we should look for the
answer choice which lends the most credibility to the letter’s argument—that the department is not
spending five times as much to perform the same duties. If we want to prephrase this answer, there
are two possible ways to strengthen this argument: either show that the department is not currently
spending five times as much, or the department is not performing the exact same duties.
Answer choice (A): The budgets of other departments are irrelevant to the question of whether or not
the Planning Department is spending five times as much to perform the same duties, so this answer
choice does nothing to bolster the argument presented in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): Since we are provided with no specific information about the department’s
various areas of expenditure, this choice does nothing to strengthen the author’s argument.
Answer choice (C): Since the relevant comparison is between the 2001 budget and this year’s budget,
this information is irrelevant to the argument.
Answer choice (D): Even if there were such adjustments, the figures cited still show the current
year’s expenditures at over five times as much as those of 2001, so this choice does not strengthen
the argument in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If a piece of 2003 legislation expanded the
duties of the Planning Department, then this strengthens the argument from the stimulus that the
department is not spending five times as much on performing the same duties.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (E)
The question stem that follows the stimulus is a strengthen question, so we should look for the
answer choice which lends the most credibility to the letter’s argument—that the department is not
spending five times as much to perform the same duties. If we want to prephrase this answer, there
are two possible ways to strengthen this argument: either show that the department is not currently
spending five times as much, or the department is not performing the exact same duties.
Answer choice (A): The budgets of other departments are irrelevant to the question of whether or not
the Planning Department is spending five times as much to perform the same duties, so this answer
choice does nothing to bolster the argument presented in the stimulus.
Answer choice (B): Since we are provided with no specific information about the department’s
various areas of expenditure, this choice does nothing to strengthen the author’s argument.
Answer choice (C): Since the relevant comparison is between the 2001 budget and this year’s budget,
this information is irrelevant to the argument.
Answer choice (D): Even if there were such adjustments, the figures cited still show the current
year’s expenditures at over five times as much as those of 2001, so this choice does not strengthen
the argument in the stimulus.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If a piece of 2003 legislation expanded the
duties of the Planning Department, then this strengthens the argument from the stimulus that the
department is not spending five times as much on performing the same duties.