ProhibitionLand

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ProhibitionLand

by ru2008 » Mon May 10, 2010 3:50 pm
The people of Prohibitionland are considering banning the service of alcoholic beverages in restaurants to curb unruly behavior on the part of its residents. Proprietors of restaurants in Prohibitionland are protesting the ban on the grounds that it will reduce their revenues and profits. However, several provinces in Prohibitionland enacted restrictions on alcoholic beverages last year, and the sales taxes paid by the restaurants in those provinces rose by an average of 50 percent. In contrast, the sales taxes paid by restaurants located in areas of Prohibitionland that did not have any restrictions rose by an average of 30 percent.

Which of the following, if true, supports the restaurant proprietors' economic stance against the ban?

In the provinces that restricted alcoholic beverages, there was a short-term negative impact on restaurant visitation in the beginning of last year.

The sales tax in Prohibitionland is lower on food and beverages than it is on other consumer goods, such as clothing.

The consumption of alcoholic beverages in Prohibitionland has been on a gradual decline the last 20 years.

The restrictions on alcoholic beverages enacted last year allowed for the service of drinks beginning around dinnertime each evening.

Overall sales tax revenue did not increase at a substantially higher rate in the provinces that enacted the restrictions on alcoholic beverages than in the rest of Prohibitionland last year.


****--Why would strengthening this argument be the same as supporting the proprietors? Wouldn't it be proving that proprietors are worrying for nothing??
Source: — Critical Reasoning |

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by jeffedwards » Mon May 10, 2010 5:19 pm
I'm not sure exactly what you are asking. The question is asking "which ...supports the restaurant proprietors' stance against the ban". So yes, the best supportive phrase in favor of the proprietor's stance would be the correct answer.

Are you referring to an answer solution? Also, what is the OA?

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by ru2008 » Mon May 10, 2010 5:40 pm
OA: D

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by jeffedwards » Mon May 10, 2010 6:18 pm
Thanks, well that's an interesting question...source? You probably already got this but this is what I gathered:

Question:
which...supports the restaurant proprietors' economic stance against the ban
Proprietor's economic stance:
the ban will reduce revenues and profits
Claim against owners stance:
Sales tax for restaurants w/ restrictions rose higher than that of those without restrictions.
Side note: this could have been because of higher revenue (I think this is what the author is assuming), higher tax rates (different provinces)...or a combination of both. Profits could have been either higher or lower in alcohol selling restricted areas, not a solid rebuttal.

Answer choice D: The restrictions on alcoholic beverages enacted last year allowed for the service of drinks beginning around dinnertime each evening.

So what the owners are saying is that, yes there were restrictions, but these restaurants were still able to sell alcohol.... We wouldn't with a ban.

What do others think?

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by paddle_sweep » Mon May 10, 2010 9:47 pm
Not sure how D is the answer. I went for B. Could somebody please post an explanation for D being the right answer?

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by diebeatsthegmat » Wed May 26, 2010 9:16 am
ru2008 wrote:The people of Prohibitionland are considering banning the service of alcoholic beverages in restaurants to curb unruly behavior on the part of its residents. Proprietors of restaurants in Prohibitionland are protesting the ban on the grounds that it will reduce their revenues and profits. However, several provinces in Prohibitionland enacted restrictions on alcoholic beverages last year, and the sales taxes paid by the restaurants in those provinces rose by an average of 50 percent. In contrast, the sales taxes paid by restaurants located in areas of Prohibitionland that did not have any restrictions rose by an average of 30 percent.

Which of the following, if true, supports the restaurant proprietors' economic stance against the ban?

In the provinces that restricted alcoholic beverages, there was a short-term negative impact on restaurant visitation in the beginning of last year.

The sales tax in Prohibitionland is lower on food and beverages than it is on other consumer goods, such as clothing.

The consumption of alcoholic beverages in Prohibitionland has been on a gradual decline the last 20 years.

The restrictions on alcoholic beverages enacted last year allowed for the service of drinks beginning around dinnertime each evening.

Overall sales tax revenue did not increase at a substantially higher rate in the provinces that enacted the restrictions on alcoholic beverages than in the rest of Prohibitionland last year.


****--Why would strengthening this argument be the same as supporting the proprietors? Wouldn't it be proving that proprietors are worrying for nothing??
i think D should be the answer for this question
the argument says that people in P want a ban drinking wine in restaurant in order to decrease bad actions in the resident ( its like when you are a drunkard, you cant control your action so you always cause bad behavior and people in the city doesnt bad behavior no more)
the restaurant disagree because that ban will cause decrease in there revenue and profits
the residents say " no, it wont decrease your revenue and profit because some province in the city enacted that ban and the sale taxes increase 50% average ( it means it sales increase thus revenue absolutely increase, stop complaining)

We have to weaken the resident's convince and support the restaurant that the city should not enact the ban, and D does that.
D says "the restrictions on alcoholic beverages enacted last year allowed for the service of drinks beginning around dinnertime each evening." which means that the ban last year still allowed restaurants of some provinces to sell wine around dinner time and if revenue is just from dinner time, the ban will harm their revenue.