- Fri Apr 12, 2019 6:11 pm
#64073
Jerrymakehabit,
This is a strengthen ("most justify") question, so we have to support the conclusion. The conclusion is that incomes rose faster than the price of food. When I read this stimulus, my natural reaction is that people could just buy less food or crappier food, and the right choice, (C), addresses that by holding the quantity and quality of food constant.
(D) states that the prices of nonfood items have risen faster than the price of food. That doesn't tell me anything about how much food prices have risen compared to income.
Imagine:
1989 Bob makes $10,000 and spends $5,000 on food items.
2019 Bob makes an unknown amount of money and spends 25%, an unknown amount, on food items.
Bob is still single (awww).
Prove: The reason that Bob is spending a lower % of his income on food items is (basically) because he makes more money now.
(C) Bob is still buying the same quality and quantity of food--this helps.
(D) The price of nonfood items went up more than the price of food items--this does nothing to show that Bob is making more money. He could be buying fewer nonfood and fewer food items.