- Wed Aug 03, 2016 7:48 pm
#27641
Hi Rcox,
First off, let me make a quick note about your diagnostic test performance. Treading water or even seeing a score decrease on a first diagnostic test after beginning this course is not unusual. You are attempting to put into practice the techniques you are learning in your class. While this approach will pay dividends, it takes getting used to. You have a lot more going on in your head now when you take the LSAT than when you first took it cold. This test is actually a far more valuable learning tool than your first one. Now that you are getting the approach right, you should be better able to engage with the questions you got wrong or had difficulty with in order to see how you can adjust your approach to do them differently next time. You also should be getting a better sense of your pacing and what kind of adjustment you can make there. Review, review, review, and notice patterns that you can work on improving.
Now, with respect to this problem, we are looking at an Assumption question. In other words we are looking for something that is necessary for the author to believe in order for his conclusion to be valid. Because we are looking at what is required at a minimum for the author to believe in order for her conclusion to be true, you should be skeptical of strong language. Ask yourself, "Does this really have to be true in order for the conclusion to make sense?"
With respect to answer (E), it is evident that even if there were some statistics about the sales of goods in the region as a whole, the author's conclusion that "actual spending by such people (those who didn't lose their jobs) is undiminished" could still be true. Therefore (E) does not describe a necessary assumption.
Answer choice (A) rules out an alternate explanation for why their bank account balances have not increased. If we were to know that these people have been paying off debts instead of spending their money on new purchases, our conclusion about their level of spending would make no sense. Answer choice (A) describes a necessary precondition the author must believe in order for her conclusion to work.
Please let me know if I may provide further explanation.