- Sat Jun 06, 2020 2:35 pm
#76012
Hi PS,
In addition to all of the previous discussion related to answer (D), it also seems to me that this answer conflates profit with revenue. I interpreted the final clause of the concluding sentence to refer to revenue, rather than profit. Just because the ostrich farm can eventually "bring in" as much as five times what cattle ranching does does not necessarily mean that the profit is nearly five times as great. The stimulus provides no information about the expenditures of ostrich and cattle farms, so it seems difficult to make any kind of judgement about profits here. I recognize, though, that the meaning of the final clause is a bit ambiguous (as it could refer to either profits or revenue), but this ambiguity seemed sufficient to eliminate D. Does this reasoning hold? Thanks so much.
In addition to all of the previous discussion related to answer (D), it also seems to me that this answer conflates profit with revenue. I interpreted the final clause of the concluding sentence to refer to revenue, rather than profit. Just because the ostrich farm can eventually "bring in" as much as five times what cattle ranching does does not necessarily mean that the profit is nearly five times as great. The stimulus provides no information about the expenditures of ostrich and cattle farms, so it seems difficult to make any kind of judgement about profits here. I recognize, though, that the meaning of the final clause is a bit ambiguous (as it could refer to either profits or revenue), but this ambiguity seemed sufficient to eliminate D. Does this reasoning hold? Thanks so much.