Editorial: Our provinceS legislature will soon vote on a measure that
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01 Mar 2024, 20:45
Editorial: Our province's legislature will soon vote on a measure that would allow government employee unions to bargain over wages. Some critics claim this measure would increase wages and thus exacerbate our province's budget deficit. But in fact, it would probably reduce the deficit. The province immediately north of ours allows such union bargaining, and its budget deficit is lower than our province's—and lower than it was before the province allowed union bargaining.
The conclusion of the argument is the following:
it (a measure that would allow government employee unions to bargain over wages) would probably reduce the deficit
The support for the conclusion is the following:
The province immediately north of ours allows such union bargaining, and its budget deficit is lower than our province's—and lower than it was before the province allowed union bargaining.
So, the argument uses the fact that another province allows union bargaining and has a budget deficit that is lower than that of "our province" and is lower than it was before union bargaining to support the conclusion that the budget deficit of "our province" would probably decrease as a result of allowing union bargaining.
The editorial's argument is most vulnerable to criticism on which of the following grounds?
This is a Flaw question, and the correct answer will describe a flaw in the argument.
A. It fails to adequately address the possibility that many factors affect provincial budget deficits.
The argument does exactly what this choice describes.
Let's review the evidence the argument uses to support the conclusion that the measure would probably reduce the deficit.
The province immediately north of ours allows such union bargaining, and its budget deficit is lower than our province's
This premise provides some support for the conclusion. At the same time, there could be many other factors that underlie the difference in budget deficits. So, the cause of the difference may not be that one province allows union bargaining whereas the other doesn't.
The province immediately north of ours allows such union bargaining, and its budget deficit is ...and lower than it was before the province allowed union bargaining.
Even this outcome could be the result of many factors other than allowing union bargaining.
In general, the fact that a province allows union bargaining and has a lower deficit doesn't necessarily mean that the first is the cause of the second.
So, we can see that, having used that evidence to support the conclusion, the argument is vulnerable to the criticism that "It fails to adequately address the possibility that many factors affect provincial budget deficits."
Keep.
B. It confuses a claim about the budget deficit in one province with a similar claim about the deficit in another, neighboring province.
This choice is incorrect because the argument simply doesn't do what it describes.
After all, the argument doesn't make a similar claim about the other province: it doesn't make the claim that a measure to allow union bargaining in the other province probably will, in the future, reduce the other provinces's deficit.
Also, the argument doesn't confuse any claims with each other.
Eliminate.
C. It overlooks the possibility that the budget deficit of the province immediately to the north was higher before that province allowed the union bargaining.
This choice is counterfactual.
After all, the argument actually says, "The province immediately north of ours allows such union bargaining, and its budget deficit is ... lower than it was before the province allowed union bargaining."
The stated fact that the budget deficit of province immediately to the north is lower than it was before the province allowed union bargaining means that the budget deficit of province immediately to the north was higher before it allowed union bargaining.
So, the argument clearly does not overlook "the possibility that the budget deficit of the province immediately to the north was higher before that province allowed the union bargaining."
Eliminate.
D.It takes for granted that if the measure reduces the budget deficit, then it will not increase wages of government employees.
The argument does not involve the conclusion or require the assumption that "if the measure reduces the budget deficit, then it will not increase wages of government employees."
After all, the argument works as long as the measure would reduce the deficit, regardless of what else goes on.
So, it doesn't take the idea mentioned by this choice for granted since it doesn't involve or rely on that idea.
Eliminate.
E. It fails to adequately distinguish a factual claim about the measure's likely consequences from a value judgment that the measure should be enacted.
This choice is incorrect because the argument simply doesn't do what it describes.
After all, the argument doesn't involve any "value judgment that the measure should be enacted." Rather, it simply makes a claim about the measure's likely consequences without getting into any value judgment.
Eliminate.
Correct answer: A