prerak Wrote:Stacey, I understand your reasoning and explanation about the differences between fixed and variable cost, but don't see how we can be expected to know that the fixed cost may change. There is nothing that suggests that it will change. Based on Answer choice B, you have the relationship between the values of fixed and variable costs that you need.
while it of course won't hurt to be familiar with concepts like fixed cost, variable cost, etc., the only business concept that you absolutely MUST know for the test is:
profit = revenue - cost
everything else either won't be tested or will be explained in full in the problem statement. (in this problem, the statement tells you everything you need to know about fixed and variable cost. concentrating excessively on their real-world significance will in fact
hinder your progress on the problem.**)
in this case, you need to know the percentage change in the TOTAL of two items. this demands that you be able to calculate the ratio of (current TOTAL cost) : (previous TOTAL cost).
(1) you can't calculate the ratio, because you don't know how big FC is in relation to VC. (if FC >>> VC, then the % change will be close to +13%, while if FC <<< VC, then the % change will be close to -5%)
(2) you can't calculate the ratio, because you have no idea what has happened to FC. unless the problem
ties FC to VC, you should assume that the two quantities can vary independently (in the same way as you'd assume that the length and width of a rectangle are independent, unless you're told otherwise).
(together) let previous VC be 'v' and previous FC be '5v'. then the previous TOTAL cost is 6v.
make the % changes --> new VC is 0.95v, and new FC is 1.13(5v) = 5.65v. therefore, new TOTAL cost is 6.6v.
you can figure the % change from 6v to 6.6v, regardless of the value of v,*** so this is sufficient.
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**i find that this problem actually becomes easier if you replace 'total cost' with 'total body weight', 'fixed cost' with 'lean mass', and 'variable cost' with 'body mass'. try it; you'll like it.
***the % change is +10%, but you'd be wasting your time by figuring that out: it's data sufficiency, so you're done as soon as you figure out that there IS a unique solution (whether you bother to find it or not).