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Hello, I'm really confused now.

In reality, people want to buy at lower prices and sell at higher prices, so I think there's a price range between the two where they'd rather hold off on a decision than make a trade.
So to answer D, I think it requires the premise that the price people willing to sell the gift for is the same as the price they willing to buy it for, but that's not stated in the text.

And if we can assume conditions not stated in the text, wouldn't B also be a correct answer?
Because if gift cards were more appreciated, their usage rate would already be high.
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autemalias
Hello, I'm really confused now.

In reality, people want to buy at lower prices and sell at higher prices, so I think there's a price range between the two where they'd rather hold off on a decision than make a trade.
So to answer D, I think it requires the premise that the price people willing to sell the gift for is the same as the price they willing to buy it for, but that's not stated in the text.

And if we can assume conditions not stated in the text, wouldn't B also be a correct answer?
Because if gift cards were more appreciated, their usage rate would already be high.

First of all, the question stem asks you “if true, weaken the most,” which means that you need to connect the choices back to the story. And that choice must hurt the argument the most.

“ashutosh_73“

B): Gifts of cash and gift cards currently represent only about 14 percent of all gift giving

Proportion of gift type has no bearing on the argument. We want to weaken the econ’s argument that “Gift receivers (monetarily) value gift card than the actual gift... because the gift receivers say that they ‘would’ want the giver to pay only 2/3 of the actual value”

Now, B) says that 14% of people receiving gifts got gift cards as their present. Does it have anything to do with how the receivers value their gift?

It just says that “ok... out of 100 receivers, only 14 received gift cards.” Usage rate does not do anything in valuation. What you’re saying is you’re trying to make up your own assumption to connect with the story that “higher usage leads (or even correlate) to higher value.” That’s unwarranted assumption.

Comparing this choice with D)

“ashutosh_73”

D): People are unwilling to sell gifts chosen for them by others unless offered about one and a half times the gift's actual price.

OK. Now, this attacks the econ’s argument. Recalling that he/she makes a claim that receivers value gift cards over actual gift because “...receivers ‘would’ want the giver to pay only just 2/3 of what they receive,” in other words, he/she says that receivers undervalued the monetary value of their gift.

The piece of info in this choice says the opposite, which is what we want: Receivers actually perceive gift to be more valuable than what the givers paid for (as demonstrated in this choice in the way that they are unwillingly want to sell there gift unless it's x1.5 of the gift's actual price)

Let’s say the gift card and actual gift both values at $90. Here’s what could play out in this scenario:

Real gift - actual price = $90, econ's expectation = $60, receiver perceived as $135

This shows that, if this is true (reality), it (the reality) goes against what the econ’s trying to claim. That’s why this choice works.

Hope this helps!
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Explanation

Economist’s argument:

Premise: In a study, people said they’d pay on average only two-thirds of the actual price for gifts chosen by others.

Conclusion: Cash/gift cards (recipient chooses) are more highly valued than gifts chosen by others.

The reasoning assumes that the amount people say they’d pay reflects how much they value the gift.

Possible weakening idea:
If people’s willingness-to-pay in the study underestimates their true value of the gift (for some reason), then the premise doesn’t support the conclusion.

(A) Return rate increasing doesn’t directly address the valuation measure in the study.

(B) This is irrelevant to the comparison of value.

(C) but the economist’s data is an average; if some gifts are valued more, that doesn’t undermine the overall average being lower than price.

(D) That means they value it more than its price, opposite of the “willingness to pay” result. This directly weakens: The study’s “willingness to pay” measure may not reflect true value because when asked to sell, they demand a premium. So maybe they value the gift more than its price, not less.

(E) This is irrelevant to valuation in the study.

Answer: D
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