NarenS469 Wrote:Can I eliminate A based on the below reasoning?
- Minority received the contracts but there is not guarantee that they will take up those contracts, so percentage can't go up.
two things.
1/
when you see 'X was awarded a contract', 'X received a contract', etc., you can infer that X accepted/agreed/signed on the dotted line.
this is basic common-sense reading, but, also, think about the alternative!
if writers had to write, explicitly, 'X received a contract and accepted it' EVERY TIME, just imagine how annoying that would be. that would be absolutely exasperating.
(legal contracts must be written in such a way, to ensure that they don't accidentally contain loopholes or unintended technical deficincies... but that's why legal language looks like nonsense to the average person.)
in fact, if someone received a contract but did not yet accept it, then THAT would be spelled out explicitly (e.g., X received a contract for consideration), since that isn't what a typical reader would typically expect.
MUCH MORE IMPORTANTLY
2/
you should not think about RC this way.
this is a trifling issue... and wrong RC answers are ALWAYS wrong for BIG, BIG reasons.
if the correct answer is 'black', then the incorrect answers are 'white', 'white', 'white', and 'white'.
there are at least two fundamental ways in which A is irrelevant.
number one, the cited 'gap' relates to how many minority people are self-employed... and choice A has NOTHING to do with 'how many of these people are self-employed?'.
number two, the cited 'gap' is NOT between minorities and non-minorities.
the 'gap' is between (i) the proportion of minorities in the self-employed crowd and (ii) the proportion of those same minorities in the overall population.
statistically speaking, the issue is whether self-employed people are a properly 'representative sample' of the population. that there is a 'gap' means the sample is not representative.
DO NOT train yourself to look at tiny little corners of these things. by doing so, you're just adding unnecessary complexity—and thus unnecessary difficulty!—to something that is fundamentally simple.
of course, 'simple' does not automatically mean 'easy'. (for people who tend to over-think things, 'simple' is often quite hard!) but 'simple' is the way you need to teach yourself to think about these things.