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­For a consumer product such as a television, careful pricing is a very important aspect of marketing, since priding an item even slighty too high or too low can seriously reduce profits. By contrast, voter approval of government projects that benefit the public does not vary with small differences in estimates of their projected cost.

The statements above, if true, best support which of the following as a conclusion?

A. Most people are well informed about the prices of consumer products.

B. The demand for projects that benefit the public is more closely tied to standard measures of the condition of the national economy than is the demand for consumer products.

C. Anyone wishing to increase or decrease voter support for projects that benefit the public should not focus on small cost differences.

D. Many people place higher priority on funding projects that benefit the public than on buying consumer products for their households.

E. The purchase of consumer products such as televisions can be postponed more easily than can expenditures for projects that benefit the public.­­


The passage explains how there's a difference when it comes to the price of something like a TV and something like building a new bridge. Basically, people will judge/be a lot more focused on the actual price when it comes to a TV compared to a bridge that the government may propose.

We're asked to look for a conclusion. Something that these two statements would ultimately support saying.

C. Anyone wishing to increase or decrease voter support for projects that benefit the public should not focus on small cost differences.

(C) is the answer. If people only really care about price differences when it comes to consumer goods and voter sentiment for a public project doesn't, cost is probably not a good thing to focus on if you're a politician if it's a small difference. If you're thinking of building a bridge, you may get more votes by convincing people how BENEFICIAL it would be compared to saying you could make it 5% cheaper than anyone else.
 
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Hi GMATNinja MartyMurray KarishmaB Can you please explain this question? I rejected option C because it is a suggestion, so how can we conclude that? Stem is not giving any suggestions.
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Bunuel

There are a couple typos:

"priding" should say "pricing".

"slighty" should say "slightly"

Thanks!
Manifesting710
­For a consumer product such as a television, careful pricing is a very important aspect of marketing, since priding an item even slighty too high or too low can seriously reduce profits. By contrast, voter approval of government projects that benefit the public does not vary with small differences in estimates of their projected cost.

The statements above, if true, best support which of the following as a conclusion?

A. Most people are well informed about the prices of consumer products.

B. The demand for projects that benefit the public is more closely tied to standard measures of the condition of the national economy than is the demand for consumer products.

C. Anyone wishing to increase or decrease voter support for projects that benefit the public should not focus on small cost differences.

D. Many people place higher priority on funding projects that benefit the public than on buying consumer products for their households.

E. The purchase of consumer products such as televisions can be postponed more easily than can expenditures for projects that benefit the public.­
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GMATCoachBen
Bunuel

There are a couple typos:

"priding" should say "pricing".

"slighty" should say "slightly"

Thanks!


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