Crowding on Mooreville???s subway frequently leads to delays, because it is difficult for passengers to exit from the trains. Over the next ten years, the Mooreville Transit Authority projects that subway ridership will increase by 20 percent. The authority plans to increase the number of daily train trips by only 5 percent over the same period. Officials predict that this increase is sufficient to ensure that the incidence of delays due to crowding does not increase.
Which of the following, if true, provides the strongest grounds for the officials??? prediction?
A) The population of Mooreville is not expected to increase significantly in the next ten years.
D) Most of the projected increase in ridership is expected to occur in off-peak hours when trains now are sparsely used.
Greetings Verbal Experts,
When I recently solved a Mock - My option A was different and I am not getting any explanation why Option A would be wrong in this case.
option D might be the better choice here but please can someone checkout my reasoning for option A it is as follows:
We have to support the prediction that the increase in the no. of trains/day will be sufficient to tackle the issue caused by the delays, which were caused by crowding (because of difficulty to exit)
If the riders are increasing + trains are also increasing + the population will not increase doesn't that imply that the increase in trains will solve the issue of crowding as:
as we know that the author of this argument assumes that the prediction will be sufficient to tackle the crowding
no population increase means that only the 20% increase will be there which the author already thinks is ok according to the 5% increase in daily trains.