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pranjalshah
I have a doubt regarding this question. It looks very similar to this OG question that has B as the answer. However, option B in the OG question states that the cause brought inflation temporarily below its recent stable annual level of 4 percent.­ But in this question no such information is provided. 
­That is because this is a different question altogether. In the OG question, the dip in oil prices was temporary, and here, the government spending project is.  Could you let me know what your actual doubt is? I will be happy to help! 
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b_sudharsan

pranjalshah
I have a doubt regarding this question. It looks very similar to this OG question that has B as the answer. However, option B in the OG question states that the cause brought inflation temporarily below its recent stable annual level of 4 percent.­ But in this question no such information is provided. 
­That is because this is a different question altogether. In the OG question, the dip in oil prices was temporary, and here, the government spending project is.  Could you let me know what your actual doubt is? I will be happy to help! 
Thanks for the prompt reply and­ sorry for not being clear.

What I meant was, in the OG question we can infer from the option that before the temporary dip, there was a stable annual rate of 4% inflation. So there's a possibility that the 4% rate is stable and last year was just an exception due to a temporary reason.

Here, it is given that the temporary government project depressed the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent. Even though this was temporary, on what basis can we back that there will not be a downward trend if we do not know the history?­
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pranjalshah

b_sudharsan

pranjalshah
I have a doubt regarding this question. It looks very similar to this OG question that has B as the answer. However, option B in the OG question states that the cause brought inflation temporarily below its recent stable annual level of 4 percent.­ But in this question no such information is provided. 
­That is because this is a different question altogether. In the OG question, the dip in oil prices was temporary, and here, the government spending project is.  Could you let me know what your actual doubt is? I will be happy to help! 
Thanks for the prompt reply and­ sorry for not being clear.

What I meant was, in the OG question we can infer from the option that before the temporary dip, there was a stable annual rate of 4% inflation. So there's a possibility that the 4% rate is stable and last year was just an exception due to a temporary reason.

Here, it is given that the temporary government project depressed the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent. Even though this was temporary, on what basis can we back that there will not be a downward trend if we do not know the history?­
You are most welcome! ­The author draws his conclusion based on what happened this year alone. He says because there was a 1.2 percent reduction in the rate of employment this year, the downward trend will continue. A flaw in the argument is that it overlooks the possibility of a specific situation that may have led to the drop in the rate of unemployment this year. If this is a permanent situation, the argument could remain on solid ground; however, if this situation is temporary, the argument will be weakened because the downward trend may not necessarily continue. Answer option (B) says the government project depressed the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent this year. Therefore, the reduction that happened this year could have been because of the government project. But if the project is stalled or withdrawn, the unemployment rate may not go down. The very same option also says this project is temporary. So, it casts doubt on the conclusion that the downward trend will continue. All we are looking for is an option that casts doubt on the argument. And (B) happens to do exactly that.

Look at it this way:

0.8 percent drop out of 1.2 percent attributed to the government project | Remaining 0.4 percent due to some other factors

Project withdrawn -> 0.8 percent increase in the then existing rate -> Even if other factors continue to remain, an overall increase in the unemployment rate by 0.4 percent could occur the year the project is withdrawn as opposed to the previous year -> Unemployment rate could go up.

Hope this clarfied your doubt! :) Do you have any other way of looking at it? ­
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Bunuel
­Last year the rate of unemployment was 8.2 percent, but this year it has been 7 percent. We can conclude that unemployment is on a downward trend and the rate will be even lower next year.

Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the conclusion above?

A. The unemployment figures were computed on the basis of a representative sample of economic data rather than all of the available data.

B. This year a temporary government spending project depressed the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent.

C. Increases in hiring would cause companies to be more productive, netting them earnings that would allow them to hire yet further.

D. The 8.2 percent rate of unemployment last year represented a two-year high.

E. The unemployment rate is a measure only of those individuals without employment who are looking for jobs.

​​​​​​​
­

Conclusion:unemployment is on a downward trend and the rate will be even lower next year.

Answer: B

Option CD and E are irrelevant to the argument. Option A requires a lot of convoluted assumption

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Bunuel
­Last year the rate of unemployment was 8.2 percent, but this year it has been 7 percent. We can conclude that unemployment is on a downward trend and the rate will be even lower next year.

Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the conclusion above?

A. The unemployment figures were computed on the basis of a representative sample of economic data rather than all of the available data.

B. This year a temporary government spending project depressed the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent.

C. Increases in hiring would cause companies to be more productive, netting them earnings that would allow them to hire yet further.

D. The 8.2 percent rate of unemployment last year represented a two-year high.

E. The unemployment rate is a measure only of those individuals without employment who are looking for jobs.
­

OFFICIAL EXPLANATION:



Reading the question: this is a weak argument, and we're asked to weaken it, so it will end up in shambles. We can create a filter by making a prediction of the answer. Perhaps unemployment for this population fluctuates from year to year around some level, so it's not down, it's basically the same within the envelope of fluctuation. We can use that expectation to filter the answer choices.

Applying the filter: choice (A) would strengthen the argument, so it's out. Choice (B) bears some similarity to our prediction, so it passes the filter. Choice (C) presents a hypothetical that does not shed light on the truth of the current situation, so it's irrelevant. Choice (D) doesn't especially weaken the argument; the rate could still be on a downward trend, given (D). Choice (E) is a definition of the unemployment rate that doesn't shed light on whether it's truly downward-trending. That leaves us with choice (B).

Logical proof: We can confirm choice (B) with the negation test. What if this year a temporary government spending project increased the unemployment rate by 0.8 percent? Then we have a reason to believe that the rate will go down in the future, when the temporary project effect is gone. So the negation of (B) would strengthen the argument, so (B) itself does weaken the argument.

The correct answer is (B).
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