Hi All,
This question involves "groups within groups" and you have to pay careful attention to the wording to get to the correct answer (thankfully, the math is pretty straight-forward). You can solve this problem with algebra or by TESTing VALUES.
Let's say that 100 people were surveyed.
From the first sentence, we know that there are 2 main groups of people:
1) Those who are MARRIED
2) Those who are NOT MARRIED
We're told that 56% of those who were SURVEYED stated truthfully that they were MARRIED.
56% of 100 = 56 people were married (and told the truth)
Next, we're told that 30% of those who were MARRIED did not include that information. This "30% group" is NOT 30% of 100; it's 30% of the people who were MARRIED. So in that first group (above), we have 2 sub-groups:
A) Married and told the TRUTH = 56
B) Married and did NOT tell the truth = 30% of the TOTAL 'married' group
We can now set up an equation using both these pieces of info:
X = Total married people
X = MarriedTruth + MarriedLied
X = 56 + .3(X)
Now we have 1 variable and 1 equation, so we can figure out the TOTAL number of married people...
.7X = 56
X = 80
This means that 80 TOTAL people from the original 100 surveyed are married (regardless of whether they told the truth or not).
Final Answer:
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich