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Let minivans and sedans be represented as m and s respectively; g and e for gasoline and electricity respectively.

Therefore, me + mg + sg + se = 1 (where me represents minivans with electricity and so on)

We are to find if se>mg

Statement 1 gives me+mg+sg = 2/5. From this, we can find se. We cannot find mg. Not sufficient

Statement 2 gives sg+se+me = 5/8. From this, we can find mg. We cannot find se. Not sufficient

Combining both statements, we can compare mg and se and hence sufficient.

Therefore, Option C
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Bunuel
A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


 


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The answer is yes ie greater,thus the argument is sufficient enough to arrive at a conclusion
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A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity.

If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

MinivanSedanTotal
Gasoliney
Electricityx
Total

Is x > y ?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.

MinivanSedanTotal
Gasoliney
Electricityx= 1 - 2/5 = 3/5
Total

Since y is unknown
NOT SUFFICIENT


(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


MinivanSedanTotal
Gasoliney = 1 - 5/8 = 3/8
Electricityx
Total

Since x is unknown
NOT SUFFICIENT

(1) + (2)
(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


MinivanSedanTotal
Gasoliney = 1 - 5/8 = 3/8
Electricityx= 1 - 2/5 = 3/5
Total

x = 3/5 > y = 3/8
SUFFICIENT

IMO C
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The prompt says we have Se , Sg, Me, Mg and want to know whether Se/total > Mg/total.

Using statement (1):
If P(M or g) = 2/5, then the P(S and e) = 3/5. The 2/5 includes NO electric sedans. Thus, statement (1) alone is sufficient

Using statement (2)
We know the P(M or g), but we can't say how many vehicles are Sedan AND electric, thus statement (2) alone is NOT sufficient.

Answer: A)
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Information given:
- Rental firm has only 2 types of vehicles, minivans and sedans
- Each vehicle runs on 1 fuel type, gasoline or electricity
- Four possible combinations: Minivan/gas, Minivan/electric, Sedan/gas, Sedan/electric

Question:
- Is the probability that a randomly selected vehicle is a sedan on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan on gasoline?

Solution:
- Statement 1: The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
- P(M) + P(G) - P(MG) = 2/5
- We do not know P(M) or P(G)
- No info about P(SE)
- Insufficient

- Statement 2: The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.
- P(S) + P(E) - P(SE) = 5/8
- We do not know P(S) or P(E)
- No info about P(MG)
- Insufficient

- Statement 1 and 2
- We now have both statements
- We don't know P(M), P(G), P(S), P(E) individually
- We don't know how P(M) and P(G) relate to P(S) and P(E)
- Insufficient

Answer: E, statement together not sufficient
Bunuel
A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


 


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for the GMAT Club Olympics Competition

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A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

S=Sedan; M=Minivan; E=Electricity; G=Gasoline;

SE+SG+ME+MG = Total Vehicle;

Question: SE > MG ?; SE - MG > 0 ?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.

ME + MG + SG = 2/5;

Cannot ascertain SE > MG; Insufficient.

(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.

SE + SG + ME = 5/8;

Cannot ascertain SE > MG; Insufficient.

Using Both: Subtract equation 1 from equation 2.

SE - MG = 5/8 - 2/5 = 9/40; Sufficient.
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define some variables:
* MG = minivan running on gasoline
* ME = minivan running on electricity
* SG = sedan running on gasoline
* SE = sedan running on electricity
We need to determine if P(SE) > P(MG).
Statement 1: P(minivan OR gasoline) = 2/5
This means P(MG OR ME OR SG) = 2/5
We can write this as P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) - P(MG AND ME) - P(MG AND SG) - P(ME AND SG) + P(MG AND ME AND SG)
Since a vehicle can't be both a minivan and sedan, or run on both fuels simultaneously, this simplifies to:
P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) = 2/5
This doesn't give us enough information to determine if P(SE) > P(MG). Statement 1 alone is insufficient.
Statement 2: P(sedan OR electricity) = 5/8
This means P(SG OR SE OR ME) = 5/8
Using similar logic as before, this simplifies to:
P(SG) + P(SE) + P(ME) = 5/8
Again, this alone doesn't tell us if P(SE) > P(MG). Statement 2 alone is insufficient.
Statements 1 and 2 combined:
From Statement 1: P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) = 2/5
From Statement 2: P(SG) + P(SE) + P(ME) = 5/8
Also, since these are all the possible vehicles:
P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) + P(SE) = 1
From Statement 1, we get:
P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) = 2/5
Therefore: P(SE) = 1 - 2/5 = 3/5
From Statement 2, we get:
P(SG) + P(SE) + P(ME) = 5/8
Therefore: P(MG) = 1 - 5/8 = 3/8
Now we can compare: P(SE) = 3/5 and P(MG) = 3/8
Since 3/5 > 3/8, we can determine that P(SE) > P(MG).
Therefore, the statements together are sufficient to answer the question.
The answer is C) Both statements together are sufficient, but neither alone is sufficient.
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Let:
SE: sedan & electric
SG: sedan & gasoline
ME: minivan & electric
MG: minivan & gasoline

Then:
SE+SG+ME+MG=1

We are asked:
Is SE>MG?

Statement 1:
The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5
So:
P(minivan or gasoline)=P(minivan)+P(gasoline)−P(minivan AND gasoline)=(ME+MG)+(SG+MG)−MG=ME+MG+SG+MG−MG=ME+SG+MG = 2/5
So:
ME+SG+MG = 2/5


Which gives us:
SE=1−(ME+SG+MG)=1− 2/5= 3/5

Now we know SE but MG is unknown.
So, Statement (1) alone is not sufficient which eliminates option A and D.

Statement 2:
The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8

P(sedan or electricity)=(SE+SG)+(SE+ME)−SE=SG+ME+SE
SG+ME+SE= 5/8
MG=1−(SG+ME+SE)=1− 5/8 = 3/8

Now we know SE but MG is unknown.
So, Statement (2) alone is not sufficient which eliminates option B.

Combining Statements (1) and (2) will provide SE and MG

SE>MG? => Is 3/5 > 3/8 => YES

Answer: C
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We have total possibilities as Minivan on Gasoline (MG), Minivan on Electricity (ME), Sedan on Gasoline (SG), Sedan on Electricity (SE)
We have total probability = P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) + P(SE) = 1

Ques: is P(SE)> P(MG)?

1) probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
Which essentially means P(MG) + P(ME) + P(SG) = 2/5
which gives us P(SE) = 1- 2/5= 3/5
Not Sufficient

2) probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.
Similary we have P(ME) + P(SG) + P(SE) = 5/8
which gives us P(MG) = 1 - 5/8= 3/8

Combining, we have both P(SE) & P(MG), hence sufficient

Ans C
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I solved it using table method. lets say=>

GasolineElectricity
Minivansx1x2
Sedansx3x4

let x1,x2,x3 and x4 we numbers or amount of cars in each section
According to question we essentially need to find out whether x4>x1

Lets see
Statement 1 => The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
okay so this is saying

(x1+x2+x3)/ (x1+x2+x3+x4) = 2/5
1 - (x1+x2+x3)/ (x1+x2+x3+x4) = 1-2/5
x4/(x1+x2+x3+x4)) = 3/5
So this essentially mean Probability of sedan running on electricity is 3/5. but with still don't know x1 so this is Not Sufficient

Statement 2 => The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.

(x2+x3+x4)/(x1+x2+x3+x4) = 5/8
1- (x2+x3+x4)/(x1+x2+x3+x4) = 1-5/8
x1/(x1+x2+x3+x4) = 3/8
So this essentially mean Probability of minivan running on gasoline is 3/8. but with still don't know x4 so this is Not Sufficient

Combine 1 and 2 =>

Probability of sedan running on electricity is 3/5.

Probability of minivan running on gasoline is 3/8

we know 3/5 > 3/8. so we can answer yes to question hence Ans C
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Let

probability of minivan(with electricity) be Me
probability of minivan(with gasoline) be Mg

probability of sedan(with electricity) be Se
probability of sedan(with gasoline) be Sg.

So adding all up Me+Mg+Se+Sg should equal to 1.

Now in first option it says Me+Mg+Sg=2/5,even though we can find Se,still we don't know how it compares with Mg.Not sufficient
In second options it says Se+Sg+Me=5/8,even though we can find Mg,we don't know how it compares with Se.Not sufficent

However taking both the options are sufficient. Solving both the equations together will solve the question
Me+Mg+Sg=2/5
Se+Sg+Me=5/8=>(replace from first option)=>Se+2/5-Mg=5/8=>Se-Mg=9/40=>So Se>Mg
Hence solved and C is the answer.
Bunuel
A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


 


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Let's denote the probabilities:

Probability of a Minivan running on Gasoline = P(M∩G)
Probability of a Minivan running on Electricity = P(M∩E)
Probability of a Sedan running on Gasoline = P(S∩G)
Probability of a Sedan running on Electricity = P(S∩E)

Statement (1): The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
This can be written as P(M∪G)=2/5.
Using the complement rule for unions: P(M∪G)=1−P(S∩E)

Given P(M∪G)=2/5:
2/5=1−P(S∩E)
P(S∩E)=1−2/5
P(S∩E)=3/5

Statement (1) tells us the exact value of P(S∩E). However, it gives us no information about P(M∩G). Therefore, we cannot compare them.
Statement (1) alone is not sufficient.

Statement (2): The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.
This can be written as P(S∪E)=5/8.
Using the complement rule: So, P(S∪E)=1−P(M∩G).
Given P(S∪E)=5/8:
5/8=1−P(M∩G)
P(M∩G)=1−5/8
P(M∩G)=3/8

Statement (2) tells us the exact value of P(M∩G). However, it gives us no information about P(S∩E). Therefore, we cannot compare them.
Statement (2) alone is not sufficient.

Combining Statement (1) and Statement (2):
From Statement (1), we found:P(S∩E)=3/5

From Statement (2), we found: P(M∩G)=3/8

Now we can answer the question: Is P(S∩E)>P(M∩G)?
Is 3/5>3/8?

To compare these fractions, we can find a common denominator, which is 40:
3/5=(3×8)/(5×8)=24/40
3/8=(3×5)/(8×5)=15/40

on comparing, we get 24>15.

The final answer is C
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A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?
P(MG+ME+SG+SE)=1
P(SE)>P(MG) ?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
P(MG+ME+SG)=2/5=0.4
P(SE)=1-P(MG+ME+SG)=1-0.4=0.6
Value of SE will be either 0.4 or less than 0.4
Sufficient

(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.
P(SG+SE+ME)=5/8=0.625
P(MG)=1-0.6=0.4,
The value of P(SE) can take any values between 0 to 0.625
Insufficient

A
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Bunuel
A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


 


This question was provided by GMAT Club
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asked: P(sedan and electricity) > P(minivan and gasoline)?

Statement 1: P(minivan OR gasoline) = 2/5 which includes the cases of minivan and electricity also gasoline and sedans. Hence not useful.

Statement 2: P(sedan OR electricity) = 5/8 which contains cases of sedan and gasoline also electricity and minivan . Not sufficient

Combined 1 and 2: Still no clear distinction between the cases . So correct option is E.
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This can be solved by visulizing a 2 set problem's grid.
Let M denote minivans, S denote sedans, G denote gasoline and E denote electricity.
MS
Gxyx+y
Eaba+b
x+ay+bx+y+a+b

The question asks if b/Total greater than x/Total

Statement 1:
x+a+x+y-x/T = 2/5
(x+a+y)/T = 2/5. -----> 1

Not sufficient.

Statement 2:
y+b+a+b-b/T = 5/8
(y+b+a)/T = 5/8. -----> 2

Not sufficient.

However, when we combine the information:
Subtracting 1 from 2:
(b-x)/T = 5/8 - 2/5 which is positive. Hence b/T > x/T

Combining the two is sufficient. Hence the correct answer is C.

Bunuel
A rental firm has only two distinct types of vehicles: minivans and sedans. Each vehicle runs on exactly one fuel type, either gasoline or electricity. If a vehicle is selected at random, is the probability that it is a sedan running on electricity greater than the probability that it is a minivan running on gasoline?

(1) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a minivan or runs on gasoline is 2/5.
(2) The probability that a randomly selected vehicle is either a sedan or runs on electricity is 5/8.


 


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for the GMAT Club Olympics Competition

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We need to find whether Probability of getting sedan running on electricity is greater than probability of getting minivan running on gasoline

Statement 1

P(Minivan or Gasoline vehicle) = P(Minivan)+P(Gasoline)- P(Minivan intersection Gasoline)= 2/5

We don't know P(Minivan) and P(Gasoline) also no information is available for P(Sedan intersection electricity)

So Statement 1 is not sufficient

Statement 2

P(Sedan or Electricity) = P(Sedan)+P(Electricity)- P(Sedan intersection electricity)= 5/8

We don't know P(Sedan) and P(Electricity) also no information is available for P(Minivan intersection Gasoline)

So Statement 2 is not sufficient

When we combine both statements then also we are unable to determine P(Minivan intersection Gasoline) and P(Sedan intersection electricity)

Thus answer to the question whether Probability of getting sedan running on electricity is greater than probability of getting minivan running on gasoline can't be determined

Correct answer is E. No statement is sufficient
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