- Tue Oct 19, 2021 2:28 pm
#91539
It's the difference between being less profitable and becoming less profitable, Anureet . The former is about comparing this investment to another type of investment, one where the difference between the rate of return and the rate of inflation is lower. Clearly, this investment, with a bigger difference, is not doing as well as the most profitable one.
To show that this investment is becoming less profitable, we have to show that the difference between those two numbers is growing! Not just that the investment is losing money, but that the rate of loss is increasing over time. That's about comparing this investment to itself at an earlier time, and we have no information about what was happening with this investment prior to the moment being described. Maybe it was always losing money at the same rate? Maybe it used to be doing even worse than it is now, and it is currently less of a loser than it used to be? That's where answer B fails. This investment IS less profitable than another one, but that might not be changing, over time, and it could even be changing for the better.
The prephrase should be your guide, and in this case that prephrase should match answer C: this investment is doing worse than whatever the most profitable one is. Tricky, but I hope that clears it up!
To show that this investment is becoming less profitable, we have to show that the difference between those two numbers is growing! Not just that the investment is losing money, but that the rate of loss is increasing over time. That's about comparing this investment to itself at an earlier time, and we have no information about what was happening with this investment prior to the moment being described. Maybe it was always losing money at the same rate? Maybe it used to be doing even worse than it is now, and it is currently less of a loser than it used to be? That's where answer B fails. This investment IS less profitable than another one, but that might not be changing, over time, and it could even be changing for the better.
The prephrase should be your guide, and in this case that prephrase should match answer C: this investment is doing worse than whatever the most profitable one is. Tricky, but I hope that clears it up!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
Follow me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/LSATadam