Last visit was: 20 Apr 2026, 20:45 It is currently 20 Apr 2026, 20:45
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
User avatar
patto
Joined: 22 Jun 2017
Last visit: 09 Jul 2021
Posts: 236
Own Kudos:
863
 [28]
Given Kudos: 149
Location: Argentina
GMAT 1: 630 Q43 V34
GMAT 2: 710 Q50 V36 (Online)
Products:
GMAT 2: 710 Q50 V36 (Online)
Posts: 236
Kudos: 863
 [28]
5
Kudos
Add Kudos
21
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 16 Apr 2026
Posts: 7,391
Own Kudos:
70,783
 [8]
Given Kudos: 2,126
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,391
Kudos: 70,783
 [8]
8
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
General Discussion
User avatar
Charu11111
User avatar
Current Student
Joined: 12 Feb 2019
Last visit: 06 Jun 2025
Posts: 86
Own Kudos:
17
 [1]
Given Kudos: 12
Location: India
Concentration: Operations, Technology
GMAT 1: 710 Q49 V38
GPA: 4
WE:Engineering (Computer Software)
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
patto
Joined: 22 Jun 2017
Last visit: 09 Jul 2021
Posts: 236
Own Kudos:
863
 [3]
Given Kudos: 149
Location: Argentina
GMAT 1: 630 Q43 V34
GMAT 2: 710 Q50 V36 (Online)
Products:
GMAT 2: 710 Q50 V36 (Online)
Posts: 236
Kudos: 863
 [3]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Charu11111
Can anybody explain me this? I thought the answer should be E but it is D and I am not able to figure out why.

Posted from my mobile device

This is a tough question. It involves conditional reasoning.
Look:

Statement (1): Sorting (necessary condition) ---> Increase GR (suffient condition)

Statement (2): Increase GR (necessary condition) ----> Increase LR (suffient condition)

Statement (3): Budget (necessary condition) ---> Sorting (suffient condition)

Then, we can conclude

Budget --> Sorting --> Increase GR --> Increase LR

Therefore, we can conclude that Budget --> Increase LR. That's exactly what D says.

Instead, E says that Sorting --> Budget. That's not what we can deduce from the argument.

I hope it's useful.
avatar
Debashis Roy
Joined: 23 Aug 2017
Last visit: 15 Dec 2019
Posts: 90
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 9
Schools: ISB '21 (A)
Schools: ISB '21 (A)
Posts: 90
Kudos: 21
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
GMATNinja
Though it is mentioned in the argument : "because of the cost of having city workers do the sorting, the sanitation department will not stay within its budget", while drawing the logical inference, can we take it for granted that the city will definitely remain within its budget if the sorting workers are not recruited...Cant there be some other ways which could lead to the sanitation dept exceeding its budget even without the implementation of sorting workers....

This is the reason I left D
avatar
Shrinidhi
Joined: 25 Aug 2016
Last visit: 21 Jun 2020
Posts: 48
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 644
Location: India
WE:Information Technology (Computer Software)
Posts: 48
Kudos: 50
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
I think ....I somewhat understood this!

So if Segregation by residents is implemented,then residents would lazily put the Recyclables too in the regular Garbage .

The regular garbage segregation at the land fill will cost heavily for the department of it's done by the workers at the landfill. so, because of this Segregation by residents needs to be implemented.

And if the segregation of the Recyclables by the residents is implemented,then naturally residents will put all of it in Regular Garbage and that would increase the landfill. that's what option D states and correctly follows.

Posted from my mobile device
avatar
gauranggarg
Joined: 11 Aug 2016
Last visit: 07 Nov 2021
Posts: 23
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 32
Posts: 23
Kudos: 8
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Can anyone explain why C isn't a must be true? Thanks in advance

Posted from my mobile device
User avatar
ShreyasJavahar
Joined: 30 Sep 2019
Last visit: 24 Dec 2022
Posts: 93
Own Kudos:
68
 [1]
Given Kudos: 421
Location: India
GMAT 1: 700 Q49 V37
GMAT 2: 720 Q49 V38
GMAT 2: 720 Q49 V38
Posts: 93
Kudos: 68
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
gauranggarg
Can anyone explain why C isn't a must be true? Thanks in advance

Posted from my mobile device


Firstly, making the residents sort their recyclables is the bare minimum the sanitation department can do to stay within budget.

Quote:
would not cause the city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill to exceed its current annual cost of sorting recyclables

Now we do not know what the current cost of sorting recyclables is; it could be 50% over the budget, 10%, 1%, within budget, anything really. Similarly, we are unaware as to what the current cost of sending garbage to the landfills is.
Once people start throwing more of their recyclables in with their regular garbage, the cost of sending this garbage to the landfills could increase(more garbage -> more trips to the landfill). That increase could be 49.999% over the budget(if the cost of sorting recyclables is 50% over the budget as mentioned above), or it might not go over the budget at all. Essentially it does not exceed the current cost of sorting recyclables and we have no idea what that cost is.
This statement therefore does not logically follow the information in the passage as we can't say with certainty whether the sanitation department stays within budget or not.

P.S. I picked C for this as well, didn't spend enough of thinking through it thoroughly.
User avatar
aalalal
Joined: 17 Apr 2019
Last visit: 22 Mar 2026
Posts: 22
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 19
Location: Azerbaijan
Posts: 22
Kudos: 3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
I do not get it why it is not E. Can some please explain?

Posted from my mobile device
User avatar
krndatta
Joined: 09 Feb 2020
Last visit: 17 Oct 2024
Posts: 380
Own Kudos:
46
 [1]
Given Kudos: 433
Location: India
Posts: 380
Kudos: 46
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hi aalalal,
I am not an expert but I think I can add two cents.
The passage mentions that "if the sorting requirement is not implemented for residents, then the city department will not stay with in its budget". This is because the city department would have to do the sorting and the budget would increase.
However, the question stem asks us what "logically follows". We can't be sure that if we implement the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget. This is not necessarily that follows. There could be other reasons too for the sanitation department to exceed the given budget such as increase in manpower or increase in salaries. etc. Hence, not implementing the requirement does not mean it will remain in the budget.
However, option D(https://gmatclub.com/forum/if-the-city- ... l#p2247369) as explained by GMAT Ninja above correctly showcases how option D is correct.

KarishmaB ma'am request your evaluation.
User avatar
KarishmaB
Joined: 16 Oct 2010
Last visit: 20 Apr 2026
Posts: 16,437
Own Kudos:
79,367
 [4]
Given Kudos: 484
Location: Pune, India
Expert
Expert reply
Active GMAT Club Expert! Tag them with @ followed by their username for a faster response.
Posts: 16,437
Kudos: 79,367
 [4]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
patto
If the city starts requiring residents to sort the materials that they put out for recycling, then many residents will put more recyclables in with their regular garbage. This will result in more recyclables being buried in the city's landfill. However, because of the cost of having city workers do the sorting, the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented.

Which one of the following statements logically follows from the information above?


(A) Most of the city's residents will continue to recycle even if a sorting requirement is implemented.

(B) If the city starts requiring residents to sort their recyclables, then all of the residents who continue to recycle will sort their recyclables.

(C) Implementing the sorting requirement would not cause the city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill to exceed its current annual cost of sorting recyclables.

(D) The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget.

(E) If the city implements the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget.

Given in the argument: the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented.

Unless can be converted to 'If not' to get the implications of the condition.

Given in the argument: If sorting is not implemented, dept will not stay within budget.

What does this if-then statement imply? Only two things:
If we know that sorting was not implemented, we can say that the dept did not stay within budget.
If we know that the dept stayed within budget, we know that sorting was implemented.

(D) The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget.
If we know that the sanitation dept stayed within budget, we can say that sorting was implemented. If sorting was implemented, we know that garbage going into landfill would have increased. Hence, (D) is correct. It follows logically from the given argument.


(A) Most of the city's residents will continue to recycle even if a sorting requirement is implemented.

We don't know whether most will continue to recycle. We are only given that many will reduce recycling. Whether most will continue recycling or not, we don't know.

(B) If the city starts requiring residents to sort their recyclables, then all of the residents who continue to recycle will sort their recyclables.

We don't know how many residents will follow the sorting requirement.

(C) Implementing the sorting requirement would not cause the city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill to exceed its current annual cost of sorting recyclables.

We don't know which cost is higher since they are not compared in the argument.

(E) If the city implements the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget.

We know what happens if the sorting is NOT implemented (city doesn't stay within budget). But we do not know what happens when sorting is implemented. There could be other reasons why the city exceeds its budget or it may not exceed its budget - we don't know.

Remember, 'If A then B' implies only 2 things:
Given A, B follows.
Given 'not B,' 'not A' follows
User avatar
unraveled
Joined: 07 Mar 2019
Last visit: 10 Apr 2025
Posts: 2,706
Own Kudos:
2,328
 [1]
Given Kudos: 763
Location: India
WE:Sales (Energy)
Posts: 2,706
Kudos: 2,328
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
If the city starts requiring residents to sort the materials that they put out for recycling, then many residents will put more recyclables in with their regular garbage. This will result in more recyclables being buried in the city's landfill. However, because of the cost of having city workers do the sorting, the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented.

Which one of the following statements logically follows from the information above?


(A) Most of the city's residents will continue to recycle even if a sorting requirement is implemented. - WRONG. Not at all inferable.

(B) If the city starts requiring residents to sort their recyclables, then all of the residents who continue to recycle will sort their recyclables. - WRONG. Bigger issue is with "all".

(C) Implementing the sorting requirement would not cause the city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill to exceed its current annual cost of sorting recyclables. - WRONG. Spent a lot of time on this but its wrong for 2 reasons. First, where did 'city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill' come from and second a comparison is not inferable when the red text is not in the passage.

(D) The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget. - CORRECT. To the point answer.

(E) If the city implements the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget. - WRONG. This is a direct conflict with the passage. If A then B is in the passage but in this choice it's If A then not B - think contra analogy-wise.

Answer D.
User avatar
Radyah
Joined: 07 Jul 2023
Last visit: 12 Jun 2025
Posts: 44
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 165
Location: Bangladesh
GMAT 1: 640 Q47 V31
GPA: 4
GMAT 1: 640 Q47 V31
Posts: 44
Kudos: 3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
I was confused between D and E, and ended up choosing E because it can be inferred from the last line of the argument. Logically, both E and D make sense to me. So, can someone tell me why E is wrong here?
User avatar
MartyMurray
Joined: 11 Aug 2023
Last visit: 20 Apr 2026
Posts: 1,830
Own Kudos:
7,078
 [1]
Given Kudos: 209
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V51
Expert
Expert reply
Active GMAT Club Expert! Tag them with @ followed by their username for a faster response.
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V51
Posts: 1,830
Kudos: 7,078
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Radyah
I was confused between D and E, and ended up choosing E because it can be inferred from the last line of the argument. Logically, both E and D make sense to me. So, can someone tell me why E is wrong here?
Let's compare (E) with the last line of the passage.

Here's the last line:

However, because of the cost of having city workers do the sorting, the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented.

Here's (E):

(E) If the city implements the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget.

Analyzing the two statements carefully, we see that there is a key difference between them.

"The sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement ... is implemented," means that the sorting requirement is NECESSARY for the department to stay within it's budget. In other words, it means that the department will not stay within its budget without the requirement.

Notice that that statement does not communicate what will happen if the requirement is implemented. All we know for sure from that statement is what will happen if the requirement is not implemented.

In contrast, (E) does say what will happen if the requirement is implemented: "the sanitation department will stay within its budget." In other words, (E) communicates that implementing the requirement is SUFFICIENT for the sanitation department to stay within its budget.

So, we can see that (E) is not supported by the passage, which indicates that implementing the requirement is only necessary, rather than sufficient, for the department to stay within its budget.
User avatar
RiyaJ0032
Joined: 13 Dec 2021
Last visit: 09 Feb 2026
Posts: 190
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 53
Posts: 190
Kudos: 19
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hi KarishmaB !

Just wanted to ask here that is the stem telling us that the city has sorting going on in place?

what if the sorting is not done by the city until now?

Your claim that - "If sorting is not implemented, dept will not stay within budget"

only follows if we know that there is sorting done in the city, and since residents are not doing it, it's the workers who are doing it

but the stem has not cleared whether there is sorting done or not

It can be that there is no sorting done right?

in that case, sanitation workers are not doing it

and hence the budget is in check

so even if sorting is not done, budget won't be affected

can some expert please give their insights, will be really helpful
Thank you!

DmitryFarber
egmat
GMATNinja
napolean92728

KarishmaB


Given in the argument: the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented.

Unless can be converted to 'If not' to get the implications of the condition.

Given in the argument: If sorting is not implemented, dept will not stay within budget.

What does this if-then statement imply? Only two things:
If we know that sorting was not implemented, we can say that the dept did not stay within budget.
If we know that the dept stayed within budget, we know that sorting was implemented.

(D) The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget.
If we know that the sanitation dept stayed within budget, we can say that sorting was implemented. If sorting was implemented, we know that garbage going into landfill would have increased. Hence, (D) is correct. It follows logically from the given argument.


(A) Most of the city's residents will continue to recycle even if a sorting requirement is implemented.

We don't know whether most will continue to recycle. We are only given that many will reduce recycling. Whether most will continue recycling or not, we don't know.

(B) If the city starts requiring residents to sort their recyclables, then all of the residents who continue to recycle will sort their recyclables.

We don't know how many residents will follow the sorting requirement.

(C) Implementing the sorting requirement would not cause the city's annual cost of sending garbage to its landfill to exceed its current annual cost of sorting recyclables.

We don't know which cost is higher since they are not compared in the argument.

(E) If the city implements the sorting requirement, the sanitation department will stay within its budget.

We know what happens if the sorting is NOT implemented (city doesn't stay within budget). But we do not know what happens when sorting is implemented. There could be other reasons why the city exceeds its budget or it may not exceed its budget - we don't know.

Remember, 'If A then B' implies only 2 things:
Given A, B follows.
Given 'not B,' 'not A' follows
User avatar
egmat
User avatar
e-GMAT Representative
Joined: 02 Nov 2011
Last visit: 11 Apr 2026
Posts: 5,632
Own Kudos:
33,427
 [3]
Given Kudos: 707
GMAT Date: 08-19-2020
Expert
Expert reply
Active GMAT Club Expert! Tag them with @ followed by their username for a faster response.
Posts: 5,632
Kudos: 33,427
 [3]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
RiyaJ0032
Hi KarishmaB !

Just wanted to ask here that is the stem telling us that the city has sorting going on in place?

what if the sorting is not done by the city until now?

Your claim that - "If sorting is not implemented, dept will not stay within budget"

only follows if we know that there is sorting done in the city, and since residents are not doing it, it's the workers who are doing it

but the stem has not cleared whether there is sorting done or not

It can be that there is no sorting done right?

in that case, sanitation workers are not doing it

and hence the budget is in check

so even if sorting is not done, budget won't be affected

can some expert please give their insights, will be really helpful
Thank you!

DmitryFarber
egmat
GMATNinja
napolean92728


Great question! You've identified a crucial point that many test-takers miss. Let me clarify this important aspect of the argument.

The Key Insight: Sorting IS Currently Happening

The passage actually does tell us that sorting is currently being done by city workers. The critical phrase is:
Quote:
"because of the cost of having city workers do the sorting, the sanitation department will not stay within its budget unless the sorting requirement for residents is implemented"
This phrase reveals that:

  1. City workers are currently doing the sorting (or would have to do it if residents don't)
  2. This sorting by city workers is expensive
  3. The department needs residents to take over this sorting to stay within budget

Why Your Alternative Scenario Doesn't Work

You suggested: "What if no sorting is done at all currently?"
If no sorting were happening, the passage wouldn't mention "the cost of having city workers do the sorting." You can't have a cost for something that isn't happening! The very fact that they're concerned about this cost tells us sorting must be occurring (or would need to occur).

The Logical Chain

Here's how the argument flows:

  • Current situation: City workers sort recyclables → This is expensive
  • Proposed change: Make residents sort instead
  • Budget constraint: Department can ONLY stay within budget if residents do the sorting
  • Therefore: If department stays within budget → residents must be sorting → more recyclables go to landfill (as stated in first sentence)

This leads directly to answer choice D: "The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget."

GMAT Strategy Tip

In Critical Reasoning, pay close attention to phrases that reveal implied information. The GMAT often embeds crucial facts within seemingly casual mentions. When you see "the cost of X," it implies X is happening. When you see "the time required for Y," it implies Y occurs. These subtle implications are often key to solving the problem!
User avatar
RiyaJ0032
Joined: 13 Dec 2021
Last visit: 09 Feb 2026
Posts: 190
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 53
Posts: 190
Kudos: 19
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
This is clear to me

Thank you so much for explaining with such detail and clarity!


egmat

Great question! You've identified a crucial point that many test-takers miss. Let me clarify this important aspect of the argument.

The Key Insight: Sorting IS Currently Happening

The passage actually does tell us that sorting is currently being done by city workers. The critical phrase is:

This phrase reveals that:

  1. City workers are currently doing the sorting (or would have to do it if residents don't)
  2. This sorting by city workers is expensive
  3. The department needs residents to take over this sorting to stay within budget

Why Your Alternative Scenario Doesn't Work

You suggested: "What if no sorting is done at all currently?"
If no sorting were happening, the passage wouldn't mention "the cost of having city workers do the sorting." You can't have a cost for something that isn't happening! The very fact that they're concerned about this cost tells us sorting must be occurring (or would need to occur).

The Logical Chain

Here's how the argument flows:

  • Current situation: City workers sort recyclables → This is expensive
  • Proposed change: Make residents sort instead
  • Budget constraint: Department can ONLY stay within budget if residents do the sorting
  • Therefore: If department stays within budget → residents must be sorting → more recyclables go to landfill (as stated in first sentence)

This leads directly to answer choice D: "The amount of recyclables going to the city's landfill will increase if the sanitation department stays within its budget."

GMAT Strategy Tip

In Critical Reasoning, pay close attention to phrases that reveal implied information. The GMAT often embeds crucial facts within seemingly casual mentions. When you see "the cost of X," it implies X is happening. When you see "the time required for Y," it implies Y occurs. These subtle implications are often key to solving the problem!
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
7391 posts
494 posts
358 posts