Cracking the New GMAT, 2013 Edition by Princeton Review
Author:Princeton Review [Review, The Princeton]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-0-307-94462-7
Publisher: Random House Information Group
Published: 2012-04-23T16:00:00+00:00
This is an evaluate-the-argument question and will almost certainly contain a gap in its reasoning. You should, as always, look to see whether the argument is causal, statistical, or analogical. Take a moment before you keep reading, and look at the passage again to see if you can spot which type of argument this is.
In this case, the argument was causal. Company X says the cause of its rapid turnaround was the inventory it had in its warehouses—which presumably let the company immediately take advantage of the new demand for its product. The company implies that the sole cause of the rapidity of its economic upturn was its inventory. While this may be true, it is also possible that there are other causes. If you didn’t spot the causal argument, don’t worry. You would probably have seen it when you attacked the answer choices. Let’s look at them now:
Comparing the length of the economic downturn experienced by Company X to the length of the upturn later experienced by Company X
The length of the economic downturn that preceded the upturn seems like it would be outside the scope of this argument, and, in any case, would not have much to do with whether the speed of Company X’s upturn had anything to do with the inventory it had on hand once the upturn began. If you were thinking that the length of time would matter because the inventory might be out of date, you overthought the problem. Eliminate it.
Comparing the rapidity of the economic upturn for Company X to that of other major makers of solar-powered generators, which did not have inventory on hand
If Company X’s competitors, which did not have inventory on hand, did just as well or better during the economic upturn, then Company X’s explanation for its speedy upturn might be incorrect. In other words, there might be some other cause. Would this comparison be useful in evaluating Company X’s argument? This seems like it would be very useful, but let’s hold onto it while we look at the other answer choices.
Calculating the average sales increases within the individual business units of Company X
This answer choice might help us to understand in more detail the extent of the upturn at Company X, but it gives us no insights into the causes behind the rapidity of their economic upturn. Let this one go.
Comparing the total number of solar-powered generator sales by Company X just before the economic upturn to the total number of solar-powered generator sales by Company X just after the economic upturn
Like the comparison in the previous answer choice, this comparison would no doubt detail exactly the extent of the rapid economic upturn for Company X, but not explain the cause of the rapid upturn. Eliminate it.
Using economic theory to predict the most likely date of the next economic upturn for Company X
A future economic upturn (presumably preceded by a downturn) is surely well beyond the scope of this question. We are concerned only with evaluating the reason that Company X believes is the cause of its speedy economic upturn.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Weapons of Math Destruction by Cathy O'Neil(5801)
Cracking the GRE Premium Edition with 6 Practice Tests, 2015 (Graduate School Test Preparation) by Princeton Review(4009)
What It Really Takes to Get Into Ivy League and Other Highly Selective Colleges by Hughes Chuck(3529)
Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets by Nassim Nicholas Taleb(2845)
The Tyranny of Metrics by Jerry Z. Muller(2826)
The Marketing Plan Handbook: Develop Big-Picture Marketing Plans for Pennies on the Dollar by Robert W. Bly(2769)
Ultralearning by Scott Young(2715)
The Official Guide for GMAT Review 2015 with Online Question Bank and Exclusive Video by Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC)(2621)
50 Economics Classics by Tom Butler-Bowdon(2395)
The Visual MBA by Jason Barron(1962)
The Inevitable by Kevin Kelly(1818)
Data Science for Business by Foster Provost & Tom Fawcett(1798)
Out of the Crisis by Deming W. Edwards(1743)
GMAT Official Guide 2018 Verbal Review by GMAC (Graduate Management Admission Council)(1679)
Cracking the LSAT, 2012 Edition by Princeton Review(1665)
The Personal MBA: Master the Art of Business by Josh Kaufman(1634)
The Conflict Resolution Phrase Book by Barbara Mitchell & Cornelia Gamlem(1628)
Maths and Stats for Web Analytics and Conversion Optimization by Himanshu Sharma(1552)
College Essays that Made a Difference by Princeton Review(1539)
