In a recession, a decrease in consumer spending causes many businesses to lay off workers or even to close. Workers who lose their jobs in a recession usually cannot find new jobs. The result is an increase in the number of people who are jobless. Recovery from a recession is defined by an increase in consumer spending and an expansion of business activity that creates a need for additional workers. But businesspeople generally have little confidence in the economy after a recession and therefore delay hiring additional workers as long as possible.
The statements above, if true, provide the most support for which one of the following conclusions?
A. Recessions are
usually caused by a decrease in Business people’s confidence in the economy - WRONG. Wrong inference causality-wise.
B.
Governmental intervention is required in order for an economy to recover from a recession - WRONG. Irrelevant.
C. Employees of businesses that close during a recession
make up the majority of the workers who lose their jobs during that recession - WRONG. May or may not be so. However, importantly, there is no indication that such a thing is possible.
D.
Sometimes recovery from a recession does not promptly result in a decrease in the number of people who are jobless - CORRECT. This one makes a subtle push for what it says, leaving some room of such thing not happening - realistic approach.
E. Workers who lose their jobs during a recession are likely to get
equally good jobs when the economy recovers - WRONG. Irrelevant. Not discussed or even suggested so.
Answer D.