hi -
amar.singh Wrote:The ans according to MG is 'C' which is logical if it was somehow stated that the fixed cost also changed during the period. (I am not assuming anything based on the word "fixed" in the cost.. thinking of it as any other cost which is adding towards total cost, but the stem of the question never states that the other contributing cost also changed in the period..).
a couple of things.
(1) i'm not sure exactly what you're asking here; i don't see an actual question in your post.
if you're not convinced that the answer is (c), then what do you propose is the answer to the question, and why?
(2) if the question stem doesn't state that the FC has changed, then the FC could EITHER have changed (by any percentage that's possible) OR have stayed the same.
this is the case with ALL quantities that are not mentioned in "change over time" word problems: they may have changed, or they may not have changed. you must consider both possibilities.
note that this is also, happily, in EXACT accordance with the way these statements and assumptions work in the real world. Viz., let's say you have to go to the gas station (petrol station, perhaps, depending on where you live) to buy gas (petrol) and cigarettes. you tell your friend, "hey, i gotta go buy some gas and cigarettes." your friend tells you, "oh man, gas has gone up 50% in the last month."
this clearly does NOT imply that the price of cigarettes has remained exactly the same, just because your friend has neglected to mention (or just flat out doesn't know) that price.
same deal here, and in the "rectangle area" problem created by you. all the same. uncertainty is uncertainty.
remember that this is a data sufficiency problem. the WHOLE POINT is that there are things you know and things you don't know; figuring those things out is the essence of data sufficiency.(3) you seem to be implying that you took the question stem to imply that the fixed cost remained constant. (correct me if i'm wrong here.)
first of all, that's just incorrect; see #2. you can't just make assumptions like that.
second, you KNOW that's not correct, since statement (1) describes a change in the fixed cost. if you interpret the question stem as implying that the fixed cost hasn't changed, then that is in direct contradiction of statement (1).
statements can't contradict the question stem (or contradict each other), so you know that interpretation is incorrect.