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Constance: The traditional definition of full employment as a 5 percent unemployment rate is correct, because at levels below 5 percent, inflation rises.

Brigita: That traditional definition of full employment was developed before the rise of temporary and part-time work and the fall in benefit levels. When people are juggling several part-time jobs with no benefits, or working in a series of temporary assignments, as is now the case, 5 percent unemployment is not full employment.

The dialogue most strongly supports the claim that Constance and Brigita disagree with each other about which one of the following?

(A) what definition of full employment is applicable under contemporary economic conditions
(B) whether it is a good idea, all things considered, to allow the unemployment level to drop below 5 percent
(C) whether a person with a part-time job should count as fully employed
(D) whether the number of part-time and temporary workers has increased since the traditional definition of full employment was developed
(E) whether unemployment levels above 5 percent can cause inflation levels to rise
The question tests the simplicity in approach required to mark the right answer.
C is trap if someone is overthinking it. As Honeylemon rightly pointed out that Constance never mentions anything about part time workers, one can't be sure enough to mark C if simply thought. That's why it is second most picked answer.
On the other hand, A is too straight forward to choose as correct answer. However, it correctly refers to the core of the argument i.e. what is the definition of full employment then if not what was each of Constance and Brigita gave.

Key words: traditional, now.
Also, see the tense used by each of them - present and past.
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GMATNinja nightblade354 AndrewN

I'm trying to dissect Brigita's statement for my own comprehension practice.

Am I right in concluding that according to Brigita, under contemporary economic conditions, temporary and part-time workers are not really "employed". Consequently, they are contributing to the unemployment rate and therefore, this rate would actually be more than 5%?

Thanks in advance!
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GMATNinja nightblade354 AndrewN

I'm trying to dissect Brigita's statement for my own comprehension practice.

Am I right in concluding that according to Brigita, under contemporary economic conditions, temporary and part-time workers are not really "employed". Consequently, they are contributing to the unemployment rate and therefore, this rate would actually be more than 5%?

Thanks in advance!

A quick summation is to say that Brigita doesn't agree with the current definition because she believes that it is outdated.
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url=[https://gmatclub.com:443/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&un=GMATNinja]GMATNinja[/url] url=[https://gmatclub.com:443/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&un=nightblade354]nightblade354[/url] url=[https://gmatclub.com:443/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&un=AndrewN]AndrewN[/url]

I'm trying to dissect Brigita's statement for my own comprehension practice.

Am I right in concluding that according to Brigita, under contemporary economic conditions, temporary and part-time workers are not really "employed". Consequently, they are contributing to the unemployment rate and therefore, this rate would actually be more than 5%?

Thanks in advance!
Under the traditional definition of "full employment," people are either employed or unemployed -- in other words, if they have a job they count as employed, and if they don't have a job they count as unemployed. As long as only 5% of people have no job, then we've reached full employment.

Brigita points out a flaw with this definition -- some people DO have a job, but they are underemployed. These people count as employed, but they are struggling to hold down several jobs with no benefits, or working in a series of temporary assignments.

So, even if only 5% of people have NO job, there are a bunch more people who DO have jobs but are underemployed. That's why Brigita thinks that the traditional definition is outdated -- she thinks that the 5% unemployment rate hides the fact that some "employed" people are actually "underemployed." Basically, we can't congratulate ourselves on "full employment" if that figure includes a bunch of people who are struggling to get by with multiple part-time or temporary jobs.

I hope that helps!
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The dialogue most strongly supports the claim that Constance and Brigita disagree with each other about (A) "what definition of full employment is applicable under contemporary economic conditions." Constance believes that the traditional definition of 5 percent unemployment rate is correct, while Brigita argues that this definition was developed before the rise of temporary and part-time work and does not accurately reflect the current economic situation.

(B) Whether it is a good idea, all things considered, to allow the unemployment level to drop below 5 percent - This option is not mentioned in the dialogue, so there is no evidence of disagreement between Constance and Brigita on this issue.

(C) Whether a person with a part-time job should count as fully employed - This option is also not mentioned in the dialogue, so there is no evidence of disagreement between Constance and Brigita on this issue.

(D) Whether the number of part-time and temporary workers has increased since the traditional definition of full employment was developed - Brigita mentions this in her argument, but this is not the main point of disagreement between Constance and Brigita. The disagreement is about the definition of full employment and whether the traditional definition is still applicable.

(E) Whether unemployment levels above 5 percent can cause inflation levels to rise - This option is not mentioned in the dialogue, so there is no evidence of disagreement between Constance and Brigita on this issue.
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Understanding Point of Disagreement Questions

The key rule: BOTH speakers must have an opinion on the topic, and those opinions must CONFLICT.

Let's break down what each speaker actually claims:
Constance: The traditional 5% definition of full employment IS correct (because below 5%, inflation rises).

Brigita: The traditional 5% definition is NOT correct under today's conditions (because part-time/temp work has changed the landscape).

The Direct Clash:
- Constance says the old definition WORKS today
- Brigita says the old definition DOESN'T WORK today

They disagree about whether the traditional definition applies under contemporary economic conditions.

Why the other answers fail:

(B) "whether it's a good idea to let unemployment drop below 5%" - Trap! Constance mentions inflation rises below 5%, but never says whether dropping below 5% is good or bad overall. No clash.

(C) "whether part-time workers count as fully employed" - Trap! Only Brigita raises part-time work. Constance never addresses how to count them. No clash.

(D) "whether part-time/temp work has increased" - They would likely AGREE on this. Brigita states it as fact; Constance doesn't dispute it.

(E) "whether unemployment above 5% causes inflation" - Neither speaker discusses what happens above 5%. Constance only mentions below 5%.

Takeaway: In disagreement questions, always verify that BOTH parties express opposing views on the exact same issue. If only one person discusses a topic, there's no disagreement to find.

Answer: A
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