- Tue Mar 14, 2023 6:35 pm
#99808
Hi Mazen!
Answer choice (C) is necessary for the conclusion to follow. Since that answer choice does indeed permit the conclusion, it is also sufficient for the conclusion to follow.
This is an assumption question so the answer choice is going to be a necessary assumption. The question stem does look close to a justify stem, but as Dave and Rachael note above, the stem is missing words about sufficiency, such as "Which of the following assumptions would be sufficient to allow..."
We can test (C) using the Assumption Negation technique. Negated, that answer choice would be: "The criterion used by Wilson's for selecting its award recipients has [not] remained the same for the past fifteen years." If the criteria had not remained the same, this would weaken/make the argument fall apart. The company states, "our award criterion at present is membership in the top third of our sales force"--this might come across as an unchanging criteria, but the italicized language highlights that it is only about the present criteria. If the criteria had been varying over the past 15 years, the company wouldn't be able to make the conclusion it does about the number of people being passed over for the award.