Last visit was: 19 Nov 2025, 11:23 It is currently 19 Nov 2025, 11:23
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
User avatar
hogann
Joined: 29 Jun 2009
Last visit: 21 Apr 2015
Posts: 117
Own Kudos:
1,362
 [102]
Given Kudos: 2
Affiliations: CFA Level 2 Candidate
Concentration: Finance
Schools:RD 2: Darden Class of 2012
Posts: 117
Kudos: 1,362
 [102]
9
Kudos
Add Kudos
93
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
geometric
Joined: 13 Jan 2012
Last visit: 15 Feb 2017
Posts: 244
Own Kudos:
891
 [28]
Given Kudos: 38
Weight: 170lbs
GMAT 1: 740 Q48 V42
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V42
WE:Analyst (Other)
GMAT 2: 760 Q50 V42
Posts: 244
Kudos: 891
 [28]
25
Kudos
Add Kudos
3
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
tuanquang269
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 17 Aug 2011
Last visit: 18 May 2018
Posts: 375
Own Kudos:
1,662
 [5]
Given Kudos: 44
Status:Flying over the cloud!
Location: Viet Nam
Concentration: International Business, Marketing
GMAT Date: 06-06-2014
GPA: 3.07
Products:
5
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
Bunuel
User avatar
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Last visit: 19 Nov 2025
Posts: 105,390
Own Kudos:
778,318
 [2]
Given Kudos: 99,977
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
Active GMAT Club Expert! Tag them with @ followed by their username for a faster response.
Posts: 105,390
Kudos: 778,318
 [2]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
hogann
While political discourse and the media in the United States have focused on the rise of job outsourcing, few have mentioned the sharp fall of talent “insourcing,” or the drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students since 2001, and its dire results. The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come. The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures. What distinguishes the decline of talent insourcing from the rise of job outsourcing is that the former can be easily rectified by a policy change of the United States government.

The answer to which of the following questions would be most useful in evaluating the author’s claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America?

A. What is the cost to reverse the trend of insourcing in America?
B. How does insourcing replace domestic jobs lost from outsourcing?
C. Since 2001, what has been the decrease in the number of foreign-born students in America?
D. What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students?
E. What effect would a government policy have on the number of foreign graduate students?

OFFICIAL EXPLANATION



The author claims that the "decrease in such insourcing will hurt America's competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come." In addition, the author claims that the decline in insourcing will "negatively affect the global outlook and experience of American students" because they will "not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures." We are asked to find a question whose answer would provide information useful to evaluating the claims of the argument.

(A) The focus of the argument is not on the financial costs of insourcing.

(B) The focus of the argument is not on how insourcing can compensate for outsourcing.

(C) The focus of the argument is not on the specific numbers of foreign-born students, but on the decline in their number instead.

(D) CORRECT. The argument assumes that the students will not have contact with foreigners through channels other than school. This choice asks whether the students have such contact elsewhere. If the answer to this question is "yes", the author's claims carry less weight.

(E) A government policy might have an effect on insourcing, but it would not necessarily have an effect on the specific claims of the argument.
General Discussion
User avatar
crick20002002
Joined: 29 Aug 2010
Last visit: 05 Oct 2012
Posts: 285
Own Kudos:
561
 [2]
Given Kudos: 37
Status:Prep started for the n-th time
Posts: 285
Kudos: 561
 [2]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
D is the winner here.

A simple use of Variance test can ascertain it to be the correct choice:

D) What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students?
Ans 1: American grad students have NO opportunity to interact with non-student foreigners => Strengthen the argument that " American grad students will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures"

Ans 2: (polar opposite of Ans 1) American grad students will have LOT OF opportunity to interact with non-student foreigners => Weaken the argument.

Since the polar opposite answers result in polar opposite results (Strengthen Vs Weaken) the Question is the most relevant one to evaluate the argument.

Crick
User avatar
Marcab
Joined: 03 Feb 2011
Last visit: 22 Jan 2021
Posts: 850
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 221
Status:Retaking after 7 years
Location: United States (NY)
Concentration: Finance, Economics
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V39
GPA: 3.75
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V39
Posts: 850
Kudos: 4,853
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Guys I do have a doubt regarding C.
If my answer to C is that there is a decline of 50,000 foreign born graduates in American colleges, then it strengthens the argument but if my answer to the question is just 10, i.e there is a decline of 10 foreign born graduates, then there may not be any effect on American students learning.
Please let me know if I am missing something.
User avatar
Vips0000
User avatar
Current Student
Joined: 15 Sep 2012
Last visit: 02 Feb 2016
Posts: 521
Own Kudos:
1,291
 [1]
Given Kudos: 23
Status:Done with formalities.. and back..
Location: India
Concentration: Strategy, General Management
Schools: Olin - Wash U - Class of 2015
WE:Information Technology (Computer Software)
Products:
Schools: Olin - Wash U - Class of 2015
Posts: 521
Kudos: 1,291
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Marcab
Guys I do have a doubt regarding C.
If my answer to C is that there is a decline of 50,000 foreign born graduates in American colleges, then it strengthens the argument but if my answer to the question is just 10, i.e there is a decline of 10 foreign born graduates, then there may not be any effect on American students learning.
Please let me know if I am missing something.
Yes, a portion of question :-D
Question says: " sharp fall of talent “insourcing,” or the drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students since 2001, and its dire results."
So there is a sharp fall in number of international students, and this is taken for granted while evaluating answer choices. C doesnt remain a candidate with this.

as shown by others, D it is.
User avatar
IanStewart
User avatar
GMAT Tutor
Joined: 24 Jun 2008
Last visit: 18 Nov 2025
Posts: 4,145
Own Kudos:
10,989
 [3]
Given Kudos: 99
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 4,145
Kudos: 10,989
 [3]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
greatps24

OA soon. What is your opinion on the question quality & format?

I have some issues with the wording of the question. For example, the question asks: "The answer to which of the following questions would be most useful in evaluating the author’s claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America?" But the author does not make just one claim. The author makes several claims; the author says the decrease will "hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology", that it will have "serious consequences for years to come", and that it will "negatively affect the global outlook and experience of ... American students". So which claim is the question even talking about?

There's a lot of noise in the question, but if you strip away the superfluous language, and focus on the claim about the global outlook of American students, the question tells us:

"The decrease... will ... negatively affect the global outlook ... of ... American students; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures."

But it's possible that American students can learn about other cultures in other ways - perhaps by interacting with non-students who are 'members of other cultures'. If that were true, then the decrease in insourcing may not have quite the impact the author suggests. So D is the answer.
User avatar
souvik101990
Joined: 19 Mar 2012
Last visit: 11 Nov 2025
Posts: 4,321
Own Kudos:
53,093
 [3]
Given Kudos: 2,326
Location: United States (WA)
Concentration: Leadership, General Management
GMAT 1: 760 Q50 V42
GMAT 2: 740 Q49 V42 (Online)
GMAT 3: 760 Q50 V42 (Online)
GPA: 3.8
WE:Marketing (Non-Profit and Government)
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 3: 760 Q50 V42 (Online)
Posts: 4,321
Kudos: 53,093
 [3]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
the question asks you for a consideration that will help in evaluating the author's "claim regarding the IMPACT of decreased insourcing". there are 2 such claims:
1: decreased insourcing compromises america's competitiveness in research and technology;
2: decreased insourcing is detrimental to the global outlook of american students because they won't be exposed to foreigners.

choice (e), while relevant to the last sentence of the passage, will do nothing to establish or undermine the integrity of the above 2 claims. choice (d), on the other hand, has a direct bearing on the integrity of claim number 2.

you must read the question very, very, very carefully!

- Ron Purewal (MGMAT)
User avatar
aviram
Joined: 27 Jun 2014
Last visit: 09 Feb 2016
Posts: 59
Own Kudos:
119
 [4]
Given Kudos: 125
Location: New Zealand
Concentration: Strategy, General Management
GMAT 1: 710 Q43 V45
GRE 1: Q161 V163
GRE 2: Q159 V166
GPA: 3.6
WE:Editorial and Writing (Computer Software)
GMAT 1: 710 Q43 V45
GRE 1: Q161 V163
GRE 2: Q159 V166
Posts: 59
Kudos: 119
 [4]
4
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
souvik101990
This question is part of the GMAT Club Critical Reasoning : Evaluate" Revision Project.

While political discourse and the media in the United States have focused on the rise of job outsourcing, few have mentioned the sharp fall of talent “insourcing,” or the drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students since 2001, and its dire results. The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come. The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures. What distinguishes the decline of talent insourcing from the rise of job outsourcing is that the former can be easily rectified by a policy change of the United States government. The answer to which of the following questions would be most useful in evaluating the author’s claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America?

A. What is the cost to reverse the trend of insourcing in America?

B. How does insourcing replace domestic jobs lost from outsourcing?

C. Since 2001, what has been the decrease in the number of foreign-born students in America?

D. What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students?

E. What effect would a government policy have on the number of foreign graduate students?

From the answers available, choice D is correct because it is the only one that directly affects the impact of insourcing. However, I think the question isn't that great because the main impact of insourcing that the author mentions is to 'America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come'. The part of learning from different cultures is a secondary impact, and I thought the main impact should be what needs to be evaluated.
User avatar
TeamGMATIFY
Joined: 20 Aug 2015
Last visit: 31 Oct 2016
Posts: 339
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 10
Location: India
GMAT 1: 760 Q50 V44
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 1: 760 Q50 V44
Posts: 339
Kudos: 1,504
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Sash143
While political discourse and the media in the United States have focused on the rise of job outsourcing, few have mentioned the sharp fall of talent “insourcing,” or the drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students since 2001, and its dire results. The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come. The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures. What distinguishes the decline of talent insourcing from the rise of job outsourcing is that the former can be easily rectified by a policy change of the United States government.

The answer to which of the following questions would be most useful in evaluating the author’s claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America?

A) What is the cost to reverse the trend of insourcing in America?
B) How does insourcing replace domestic jobs lost from outsourcing?
C) Since 2001, what has been the decrease in the number of foreign-born students in America?
D) What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students?
E) What effect would a government policy have on the number of foreign graduate students?

Premise: Decrease in insourcing of foreign students
Conclusion: American students will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of foreign cultures

To evaluate this conclusion, we need to find the statement that directly affects it.
Only option D talks about it.

If there are other opportunities for interacting with foreigners, then the american students should not worry much about the learning of cultures from the students.
If there are not much opportunities, then the american students should worry about it.
User avatar
InstantMBA
Joined: 03 Mar 2013
Last visit: 08 Dec 2021
Posts: 30
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 40
Posts: 30
Kudos: 112
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
What confused me is that the question has to do with the impact of the premise on an intermediate conclusion, not the main conclusion.

As I see it, the intermediate conclusion contained two points:
The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country:
(1) will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs;
(2) they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures.

Now looking at the answers:

A. What is the cost to reverse the trend of insourcing in America?
B. How does insourcing replace domestic jobs lost from outsourcing?

--> Both are off-topic.

C. Since 2001, what has been the decrease in the number of foreign-born students in America?
E. What effect would a government policy have on the number of foreign graduate students?

--> Both have to do with the number of 'insourcing', not its impact on the intermediate conclusion.

D. What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students?
-> Only D addressed that impact of the premise on the intermediate conclusion. Not only that, this connection is only with the second part of the intermediate conclusion, not the first part.
User avatar
CrackverbalGMAT
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 03 Oct 2013
Last visit: 19 Nov 2025
Posts: 4,844
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 225
Affiliations: CrackVerbal
Location: India
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 4,844
Kudos: 8,945
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
let us simplify the argument given --

decreased insourcing --> American students will not have opportunity to learn about foreign cultures --> negatively impact their global outlook --> hurt competitiveness in basic research and applied technology.

let us look at the answer options -

Option A - Incorrect.
Does not matter. As we already know that it can be "easily rectified". Moreover, whatever the cost to reverse the trend is has no impact on the argument that decreased insourcing hurts competitiveness in basic research and technology.

Option B - Incorrect.
The argument has nothing to do with "outsourcing" or even replacing jobs lost to outsourcing.

Option C - Incorrect.
Does not matter. As we already know that drop has been "sharp". Knowing absolute quantities does not add anything new.

Option D - Correct.
Let us supply opposite answers.
1. they have great opportunities. This breaks the chain of reasoning in the argument, especially this - decreased insourcing --> American students will not have opportunity to learn about foreign cultures.

Option E - Incorrect.
Not relevant. Look at the argument again. We are specifically concerned with how decreased insourcing hurts competitiveness in basic research and technology.
How government policies impact insourcing is irrelevant.
User avatar
CrackverbalGMAT
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 03 Oct 2013
Last visit: 19 Nov 2025
Posts: 4,844
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 225
Affiliations: CrackVerbal
Location: India
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 4,844
Kudos: 8,945
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
let us simplify the argument (claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America) --

drop in insourcing --> students will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures --> Negative impact on global outlook and competitiveness of American students

Let us take a look at the answer options --

Option A - Incorrect

Not relevant to the author's claim mentioned above on the impact of the decreased insourcing in America.
Moreover, we already know that such a trend is "easy to rectify" through a policy change -- the actual cost is not relevant.

Option B - Incorrect

The "method" (or HOW) through which insourcing replaces jobs lost to outsourcing is not relevant to the author's claim -- Furthermore, nowhere is it mentioned that insourcing replaces domestic jobs lost to outsourcing.

Option C - Incorrect

The actual number does not add any "new/relevant" information necessary to evaluate the argument mentioned above -- we already know that there has been a "sharp fall in talent insourcing".

Option D - Correct answer

If they have many such opportunities, the claim is weakened. If they have none, the claim is strengthened.

Option E - Incorrect

We already know the answer for this -- "the former [decline in insourcing = drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students] can be easily rectified by a policy change of the United States government.
In addition, this is not relevant to evaluating the author's claim on the impact of "decrease in talent insourcing".
User avatar
Skywalker18
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 08 Dec 2013
Last visit: 15 Nov 2023
Posts: 2,039
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 171
Status:Greatness begins beyond your comfort zone
Location: India
Concentration: General Management, Strategy
GPA: 3.2
WE:Information Technology (Consulting)
Products:
Posts: 2,039
Kudos: 9,961
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
While political discourse and the media in the United States have focused on the rise of job outsourcing, few have mentioned the sharp fall of talent “insourcing,” or the drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students since 2001, and its dire results. The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come. The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures. What distinguishes the decline of talent insourcing from the rise of job outsourcing is that the former can be easily rectified by a policy change of the United States government.

Type- Evaluate
Boil it down - The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come.

• What is the cost to reverse the trend of insourcing in America? - irrelevant - the actual cost is not a concern
• How does insourcing replace domestic jobs lost from outsourcing? - irrelevant - the argument does not specify this
• Since 2001, what has been the decrease in the number of foreign-born students in America? - irrelevant - the actual number of decrease is irrelevant to the argument
• What opportunities do American graduate students have to interact regularly with foreigners who are not students? - Correct - applying variance test -
If American students regularly interact with foreigners who are not students, then the argument is weakened, else it is strengthened
• What effect would a government policy have on the number of foreign graduate students?- irrelevant

Answer D
User avatar
Wonderwoman31
Joined: 21 Apr 2018
Last visit: 22 Apr 2023
Posts: 59
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 82
Location: India
GMAT 1: 710 Q50 V35
GMAT 2: 750 Q49 V42
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hi nightblade354,

Could you please help me out with this question. I think since I am a non-native speaker, sometimes I get stuck in understanding the information provided in the passage and this is one such case.

What I understood from the passage is mentioned below:

Media focuses on outsourcing, very few focus on the following two things:

1. Sharp fall in talent insourcing
2. Drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students.

Then the author presents the impact of each of the case and then the question stem asks about evaluating the author's claim for first case. I am curious as option choice which is correct is talking about the second case.

I might be mistaken while reading, but could you please help me out.
User avatar
nightblade354
User avatar
Current Student
Joined: 31 Jul 2017
Last visit: 18 Nov 2025
Posts: 1,781
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 3,304
Status:He came. He saw. He conquered. -- Going to Business School -- Corruptus in Extremis
Location: United States (MA)
Concentration: Finance, Economics
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 1,781
Kudos: 6,822
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Wonderwoman31
Hi nightblade354,

Could you please help me out with this question. I think since I am a non-native speaker, sometimes I get stuck in understanding the information provided in the passage and this is one such case.

What I understood from the passage is mentioned below:

Media focuses on outsourcing, very few focus on the following two things:

1. Sharp fall in talent insourcing
2. Drop in enrollment of foreign-born graduate students.

Then the author presents the impact of each of the case and then the question stem asks about evaluating the author's claim for first case. I am curious as option choice which is correct is talking about the second case.

I might be mistaken while reading, but could you please help me out.

Wonderwoman31,

This is what the question wants you to evaluate, as these are the effects: "The decrease in such insourcing will hurt America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology, with serious consequences for years to come. The de-internationalization of graduate programs across the country will also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs; they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures."

And option (D) does just that. It counters the author's claim, thus weakening it. And this helps us evaluate the argument.

Does this help?
User avatar
rvarora
User avatar
Current Student
Joined: 05 Oct 2017
Last visit: 05 Jul 2022
Posts: 32
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 51
Location: India
GMAT 1: 640 Q47 V31
GMAT 2: 680 Q49 V34
GMAT 3: 690 Q48 V38
GMAT 4: 700 Q47 V39
GMAT 5: 740 Q49 V41
GPA: 3.44
Products:
GMAT 5: 740 Q49 V41
Posts: 32
Kudos: 61
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
The question asks to evaluate the claim regarding the impact of decreased insourcing in America i.e. decrease in number of foreign students will lead to further decrease in America’s competitiveness in basic research and applied technology and also negatively affect the global outlook and experience of the American students remaining in those programs as they will not have the opportunity to learn about foreign cultures directly from members of those cultures

Option D vs E
If D is answered yes then if there are opportunities other than school interaction then it dosen't matter whether you increaes or decrease the number of foreign opportunities because they still have the chance with the current scenario.

it's like you are running a plant, but a further investment for increasing the capacity is of no use unless you can fully realize the potential of the existing capacity or expored other opportunities
User avatar
VerbalBot
User avatar
Non-Human User
Joined: 01 Oct 2013
Last visit: 04 Jan 2021
Posts: 18,829
Own Kudos:
Posts: 18,829
Kudos: 986
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Hello from the GMAT Club VerbalBot!

Thanks to another GMAT Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

Want to see all other topics I dig out? Follow me (click follow button on profile). You will receive a summary of all topics I bump in your profile area as well as via email.
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
7443 posts
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
231 posts
189 posts