- Mon Mar 08, 2021 2:53 pm
#85073
Hi whitefox20!
To identify flaws in arguments, always start with identifying the premises and conclusions and then ask yourself why the premises don't fully prove the conclusion. So let's break down this argument:
Premise: In a family business, employees can be paid exceptionally low wages.
Sub-conclusion: Operating expenses are lower, which means profits are higher.
Conclusion: Family business is the surest way to family prosperity.
Now let's look for leaps between the premises and the conclusions.
The first leap is between the first premise and the sub-conclusion. Do lower wages prove that operating expenses are lower? Maybe not. Maybe there is some other operating expense that is specific to family businesses that compensates for the savings in wages. So, sure, maybe we can't necessarily assume that lower wages lead to lower operating costs. But I also can't think of another operating expense that would be specific to family businesses that other non-family businesses wouldn't also have. So this is possibly a flaw, but it doesn't seem like a very big one.
The second leap is between the sub-conclusion and the main conclusion. Do higher profits from lower wages necessarily mean greater family prosperity? Well now I've got a much bigger problem. Sure, the family is making more in profit, but they're making less in wages. So are they really better off with the higher profits than they would be with higher wages? It seems that, in terms of overall effect on family prosperity, it ends up being a bit of a wash. If I save $1000 because I'm paying my family lower wages than I would pay others and then end up with an extra $1000 in profits, is the family really more prosperous than it would be if I made $1000 less in profits but paid my family $1000 more in wages? This is a major flaw in the argument.
Arguments can have more than one flaw in them but in a Flaw in the Reasoning question, we only need an answer choice that describes one of the flaws, usually the biggest flaw. In this case, we don't have an answer choice that describes the assumption that lower wages automatically mean lower operating costs (answer choice (B) is too strongly worded to describe that flaw). But we do have an answer choice that describes the assumption that higher profits from lower wages are going to result in greater family prosperity. So that's the answer choice we have to go with.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey