- Fri May 10, 2019 5:44 pm
#64689
Leela,
Even when you are doing an assumption question (where additional information is allowed--even required), you must restrain yourself to the scope of the stimulus and the situation described in the stimulus.
The stimulus specifically argues that the income of those injured people will increase GNP. Therefore, you are not evaluating whether any factor could help increase GNP, you are only evaluating whether that income will increase GNP.
Now, negating (D) shows that will not increase GNP since it does not result in any actual increase in employment in the country. You could try to argue about whether "income" and "net employment" are the same, but only if there is a reasonable contender to compete with (D).
(A) There's no reason why per capita income needs to be the same.
(B) The stimulus concerns a transportation network, not whether the trauma centers already exist.
(C) The stimulus concerns saving lives; increased cost will not automatically show that the program costs more than the benefit it provides.
(E) The stimulus concerns timely access, not whether there is any access at all.
Because none of the other choices are contenders, we do not get to dispute whether "income" and "net employment" are interchangeable terms. We simply pick (D) because it is directly responsive to the claim that the income of those people will positively impact GNP.
Even when you are doing an assumption question (where additional information is allowed--even required), you must restrain yourself to the scope of the stimulus and the situation described in the stimulus.
The stimulus specifically argues that the income of those injured people will increase GNP. Therefore, you are not evaluating whether any factor could help increase GNP, you are only evaluating whether that income will increase GNP.
Now, negating (D) shows that will not increase GNP since it does not result in any actual increase in employment in the country. You could try to argue about whether "income" and "net employment" are the same, but only if there is a reasonable contender to compete with (D).
(A) There's no reason why per capita income needs to be the same.
(B) The stimulus concerns a transportation network, not whether the trauma centers already exist.
(C) The stimulus concerns saving lives; increased cost will not automatically show that the program costs more than the benefit it provides.
(E) The stimulus concerns timely access, not whether there is any access at all.
Because none of the other choices are contenders, we do not get to dispute whether "income" and "net employment" are interchangeable terms. We simply pick (D) because it is directly responsive to the claim that the income of those people will positively impact GNP.