This is actually very simple. As with the majority of high level GMAT questions, you're thrown A LOT of data and are asked to process it into a form that answers the question at hand. First thing's first: remind yourself that every GMAT problem is designed to be solved within 2 minutes - you can do this!
We are asked to find the amount of blue marbles in bag Q. To make things complicated we're given the number of marbles in each bag and the percentage of each bag that is blue. GMAT makes this a party by throwing a bunch of nasty non integer percents at us to shake us up. But remember marbles are like people...you can only have a whole number of each!
Therefore when you see that 10.8% of 37 marbles in Bag P are blue...don't bother calculating. 10% of 37 is 3.7 so that 0.8% MUST take us up to 4. Bag P has 4 blue marbles. Bag R is easier...50% of 32 marbles are blue..that's 16 blue marbles. Easy! Thus far we have 20 blue marbles in total.
Now for the fun part. Bag Q has x amount of marbles...66.7% of which are blue. Time to throw in the towel? Not at all this is a piece of cake. 66.7% is the same as \(\frac{2}{3}\).
Now what do we do with this? Well we have that 20 blue marbles plus \(\frac{2}{3}\) of the marbles in Bag Q is \(\frac{1}{3}\) of the total number of marbles. Let's set this up as a formula to what we've described above and wrap this party up.
To restate what we have and what we're being asked to find: "The 20 blue marbles in bags R and P plus \(\frac{2}{3}\) of all of the marbles in Bag Q are equal to \(\frac{1}{3}\) of the 37 marbles in Bag P plus the 32 marbles in Bag R plus the x amount of marbles in Bag Q." Time to transcribe this into numbers and solve this problem!
20 + \(\frac{2}{3}\)x = \(\frac{1}{3}\)(69+x)
.This looks tricky, doesn't it? It's actually easier than it looks. Multiply both sides by three to get rid of that disgusting denominator of 3.
60+2x=69+x
x=9
Now take a moment to look back at what you were thinking when you first saw this problem as opposed to now. It's conceptually extremely simple but the key to answering this question is knowing how to efficiently use all of the data that is being presented to us.