Sam: During recessions, unemployment typically rises. Thus, air pollution due to automobile exhaust decreases during a recession, since fewer people com-mute in cars to jobs and so cars emitting pollutants into the air are used less.
Felipe: Why would you think that air pollution would decrease? During a recession, fewer people can afford to buy new cars, and cars tend to emit more pollutants as they get older.
Which one of the following is an assumption on which Sam's argument depends?
A.
People who have never been employed drive no less frequently during a recession than they would otherwise' - WRONG. Irrelevant.
B.
Most air pollution is caused by automobile exhaust emitted by cars used by people commuting to jobs. - WRONG. "most air pollution" does not equates to "air pollution due to automobile exhaust". Latter is a subset of former.
C. most people who are employed
do not use any form of public transportation to commute to their jobs. - WRONG. Even if they use it doesn't matter since they may pool or opt other ways to travel. It does look enticing at first but loses out to D.
D. During a recession, decreases in the
use of cars resulting from reductions in commuting to jobs are
not offset by increased use of cars for other reasons. - CORRECT. If it's offset then Sam's argument falls apart.
E. During a recession,
a higher proportion of people who commute in cars to their jobs lose those jobs
than do people who do not use cars to commute to their jobs - WRONG. Irrelevant.
A bit odd type of question stem for such a passage since Felipe's argument is not at all required. Just to confuse or waste time may be.
Only C and D stand a chance.
Answer D.