skim
Dear All,
Thanks for an engaging discussion. The offical explanation is as follows:
The head of engineering has concluded that the one-time doubling of costs for the raw material caused the steady decline, over two years, of profit margins. The engineer's conclusion rests on the assumption that there is a connection between the one-time raw material price increase and the two-year steady decline in profit margins. Alternatively, something else could have caused either a steady two-year decline in revenues or a steady two-year increase in costs; if so, this event is more likely to be the cause of a steady decline in profit margins over the same two-year period. As a result, this would weaken the engineer's conclusion that finding a new source for the raw material will improve profit margins.
(A) CORRECT. New competitors have caused a steady two-year decline in revenues. This weakens the engineer's contention that the one-time doubling of costs for the raw material is the cause of the steady two-year decline in profit margins.
(B) The fact that the region's mines are producing less than they did before the earthquake does not indicate anything about the cost of the raw material; it would be necessary to show that cost is not reduced in order to weaken the engineer's conclusion.
(C) The amount of raw material produced by other regions does not indicate anything about the cost of the raw material; it would be necessary to show that cost is not reduced in order to weaken the engineer's conclusion.
(D) The use of a different raw material does not indicate anything about the cost of that raw material; it would be necessary to show that cost is not reduced in order to weaken the engineer's conclusion.
(E) Although mining the raw material may become more cost-effective for the mine (that is, cheaper), this does not tell us what will happen to the price they charge for the material when selling to the company producing the product in question. It would be necessary to show that the company’s cost is not reduced in order to weaken the engineer's conclusion.
I've read and re-read this problem a dozen times now, and I can't buy into (A).
In particular, I consider it incorrect for the OA to indicate that the engineer believes that the 2 year steady decrease is due to the one time doubling of raw material costs. This is never stated in the original question.
The original question makes three statements:
1) Raw materials increased due to an earthquake
2) Profit margins have been decreasing steadily for the past two years
3) Engineer is looking for cheaper raw materials to increase margins.
It doesn't matter what logic the engineer used to arrive at (3), it's still a legitimate contention. If Profit = Revenue - Costs, and raw materials are part of Costs, then with all else being equal, reducing the cost of raw materials will increase the profits.
So in order to weaken the validity of the engineers argument, you have to prove that lower cost raw materials will not increase the profit margin.
For example, if one of the answer choices was:
"Using cheaper raw materials will require significant investment in additional refining procedures"
That would cast doubt on the validity of the engineer's decision.
I'd even go one step further, and say that even if the statement had 4 statements instead of 3, and those statements looked like:
1) Raw materials increased due to an earthquake
2) Profit margins have been decreasing steadily for the past two years
2.5) Engineer believes decreasing margins are caused by christmas elves stealing money to fund the toy factory.
3) Engineer is looking for cheaper raw materials to increase margins.
I'd still say that 3 is a perfectly reasonable decision, and that in order to cast doubt on (3), you'd have to show that cheaper raw materials might actually INCREASE costs.