LSAT and Law School Admissions Forum

Get expert LSAT preparation and law school admissions advice from PowerScore Test Preparation.

 Lsat180Please
  • Posts: 44
  • Joined: Sep 12, 2018
|
#61202
Hi! I found this question a bit complex and would appreciate a breakdown of the question, maybe a good prephrase or what to think coming off of the stimulus, and then some help attacking the answer choices. Thanks!!
 Claire Horan
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 408
  • Joined: Apr 18, 2016
|
#61246
Hi LSAT180Please,

First let us know how you approached and analyzed the problem. If you got it wrong, which answer choice did you choose and why? If you got it right, what was your reasoning? That will help the staff member tailor an answer for you. Thanks!
 Boudreaux
  • Posts: 9
  • Joined: Jan 04, 2019
|
#63502
the questions stem for this question states "would most strengthen the reasoning in the editorial." I picked E. The credited AC C just seems like a restatement of the first part of the last sentence. Would someone please let me know where I'm going wrong with this?

Thanks,
Nick
 James Finch
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 943
  • Joined: Sep 06, 2017
|
#63545
Hi Nick,

This a typical topical stimulus that relies upon careful reading of the language to understand what the author of the question is looking for. Here, we have two related but distinct concepts: outcome (actual level of inequality) and opportunity (potential for individual economic improvement). A quick reading can lead to a conflation of the two ideas, but we are being asked to link opportunity to outcome in this case, as that's the logical gap in the argument:

Premise: Economic inequality bad for democracy

Premise: Economic expansion leads to more economic opportunity

Conclusion: Democracies should promote economic expansion

Economic expansion, from what we know in the stimulus, could do nothing to alleviate inequality, or even exacerbate it. So the correct answer choice must show that economic expansion alleviates inequality, as (C) does by saying poorer people do proportionately better than richer people when the economy is growing.

Hope this clears things up!
 MrMola
  • Posts: 8
  • Joined: Jan 04, 2019
|
#65891
Greetings. I eliminated C because I found it too specific and went with B because the stimulus spoke about political divisions, and I thought that B closed that hole. Why is B wrong? Thanks!
 Malila Robinson
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 296
  • Joined: Feb 01, 2018
|
#65903
Hi MrMola,
I would agree that Answer B might be helpful to the stimulus if we are talking about democratic societies that already had factions, but what about the ones that didn't? In that case Answer B would be irrelevant.

Additionally Answer B says that the factions are "sometimes willing" to overlook past splits, which is not necessarily very strong language. The argument is saying that economic expansion policies are the way to go, but if factions may not look past their differences then the expansion policies would likely not work. Since Answer B leaves too many holes in the argument, Answer C becomes the best choice to strengthen the argument for the reasons James stated (above).
Hope that helps!
-Malila
 LakeShow
  • Posts: 9
  • Joined: Jun 02, 2019
|
#66462
I chose E and I think that is because I think when I was doing the PT I approached this questions more like a necessary assumption question than a strengthen. Can someone explain why E is wrong though; is it just that C is better/stronger?

As for C, I see how the argument James made works for that answer choice and I agree conflation of outcomes with opportunity will be problematic on this question. One issue below though:
James Finch wrote:
Premise: Economic inequality bad for democracy

Premise: Economic expansion leads to more economic opportunity

Conclusion: Democracies should promote economic expansion
However, the first premise is that "segmentation into classes of widely differing incomes between which there is little mobility" is bad for democracy. If you are missing the underlined part then yes that would just be inequality but since that part is there in the stimulus, the sentence clearly reads that the lack of of income mobility is the issue.

Then, the stimulus goes on to establish that economic expansion provides "people more opportunities to improve their economic standing." This second premise provides solid support for the conclusion that democracies should promote economic expansion and you do not need to prove that economic expansion actually results in solving inequality of outcomes (answer choice C). I definitely see how C strengthens the argument but not quite required as James said.

For E, if we add this as a premise then I think we also help the conclusion that democratic societies need to promote economic expansion. Adding this to the first sentence results and we get: the divisive political factions that result from a lack of mobility threaten economic expansion are an additional obstacle to economic expansion itself. This is a positive feedback loop, albeit for a negative outcome. Thus. we need the democratic society itself to adopt policies that ensure economic expansion so we avoid this positive feedback loop.

I'm not trying to state a personal opinion here but real-world examples help and I think this fits almost perfectly with Jerome Powell's recent comments / reasoning for a likely upcoming cut to interest rates. He's saying we should adopt (or rather, he'll enact) a policy to ensure economic expansion so that people have more opportunity to improve their economic standing, such as through low interest rate loans to go to law school or get a car/house/business/etc.
 Rachael Wilkenfeld
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 1358
  • Joined: Dec 15, 2011
|
#66730
Hi LakeShow

Let's try to start with the structure of our argument here.

P:Class segmentation with little mobility is harmful for democracy.

P: Economic expansion gives people more opportunities to improve their economic standing.

C: Democratic societies should promote constant economic expansion.

Our question stem asks for what "most strengthens" the conclusion, so we know we are looking for an answer choice that strengthens, not one that is a necessary assumption.

Our stimulus says that the economic expansion would give people more opportunities to improve their economic standing but it doesn't say which people, and it doesn't address the type of improvement. Will it help people at all economic levels the same, or will it primarily help people at the top (or bottom)? Will it allow for a tiny bit of improvement, but no way to move between classes?

Answer choice (c) strengthens our stimulus by directly addressing the distribution of benefit---that it will benefit the lower classes more, which should lead to an increase in class mobility. It doesn't need to be required for the argument--it just needs to help.

Answer choice (e) isn't really relevant to our conclusion. Our conclusion is about what democratic societies SHOULD do, not what is easy or difficult to do.

Hope that helps!
Rachael
 lsatbossintraining
  • Posts: 27
  • Joined: Oct 21, 2019
|
#72058
Wouldn't (C) weaken? Sure, the lowest-earning people would have more mobility, but wouldn't that be to the ire of higher-earners, further deepening the divide?

Accordingly, if class divisions are an issue, then it seems disproportionately improving earnings for people at low-income levels would have some negative side-effects - which is ultimately why i ruled out (C).

Where am I going wrong? Am I assuming and imagining too much during my analysis? Experts say to keep things simple and not justify an answer - ie, find a reason to make it right - but that seems to be the very foundation of this exam.

I guess my problem is I often assume, or maybe overthink, some answer choices, and I don't exactly know when I'm going overboard. Is my task to take the answer choices at face value or think about the answer choice's larger implications? Am I supposed to do both?

Many thanks,
Kyle
 James Finch
PowerScore Staff
  • PowerScore Staff
  • Posts: 943
  • Joined: Sep 06, 2017
|
#72180
Hi Kyle,

No, (C) doesn't necessarily exacerbate the divide; the idea would be that everyone would be getting more, just that the poor would proportionally do better (so increasing their share of an ever-growing pie). You're making an unfounded assumption that this would antagonize the rich and lead to divisions through some other mechanism than is described in the stimulus; the stimulus is saying that economic inequality creates class divisions, not subjective resentments. What we need to focus on is tying economic expansion with a lessening of economic inequality, which (C) does.

The key to questions like these is understanding the fundamental logic of the stimulus and sticking to it. There is a clear logical gap that must be filled if the conclusion is to be true, and that gap must be identified as needing economic expansion to cause less income inequality.

Hope this clears things up!

Get the most out of your LSAT Prep Plus subscription.

Analyze and track your performance with our Testing and Analytics Package.