If Carla, Nora, and Wanda have a total of $48, how much money does Carla have?

This topic has expert replies
Legendary Member
Posts: 1223
Joined: Sat Feb 15, 2020 2:23 pm
Followed by:1 members

Timer

00:00

Your Answer

A

B

C

D

E

Global Stats

If Carla, Nora, and Wanda have a total of $48, how much money does Carla have?

(1) The positive difference between the amounts of money that Carla and Nora have is $12.
(2) Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money.

Answer: E
Source: GMAT hacks
Source: — Data Sufficiency |

GMAT/MBA Expert

User avatar
GMAT Instructor
Posts: 16207
Joined: Mon Dec 08, 2008 6:26 pm
Location: Vancouver, BC
Thanked: 5254 times
Followed by:1268 members
GMAT Score:770

Timer

00:00

Your Answer

A

B

C

D

E

Global Stats

BTGModeratorVI wrote:
Sun Sep 27, 2020 7:10 am
If Carla, Nora, and Wanda have a total of $48, how much money does Carla have?

(1) The positive difference between the amounts of money that Carla and Nora have is $12.
(2) Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money.

Answer: E
Source: GMAT hacks
Target question: How much money does Carla have?

Given: Carla, Nora, and Wanda have a total of $48

Statement 1: The positive difference between the amounts of money that Carla and Nora have is $12
So, EITHER Carla has $12 more than Nora OR Carla has $12 less than Nora.
This certainly doesn't seem very helpful.
ALSO, there's no information about Wanda.
Statement 1 is clearly NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money.
No information about Carla.
Statement 2 is clearly NOT SUFFICIENT

Statements 1 and 2 combined
Let's examine the 2 possible cases from statement 1 in conjunction with statement 2.
Case a: Carla has $12 more than Nora
Let x = the $ Nora has
This means that x+12 = the $ Carla has
And x = the $ Wanda has (since Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money)
Since the TOTAL = $48, we can write: x + (x+12) + x = 48
Simplify: 3x + 12 = 48
Solve: x = 12
Since x+12 = the $ Carla has, we can conclude that 12+12 = Carla's money.
In other words, Carla has $24

Case b: Carla has $12 less than Nora
Let x = the $ Carla has
This means that x+12 = the $ Nora has
And x+12 = the $ Wanda has (since Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money)
Since the TOTAL = $48, we can write: x + (x+12) + (x+12) = 48
Simplify: 3x + 24 = 48
Solve: x = 8
In other words, Carla has $8
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, the combined statements are NOT SUFFICIENT

Answer: E
Brent Hanneson - Creator of GMATPrepNow.com
Image

Legendary Member
Posts: 2214
Joined: Fri Mar 02, 2018 2:22 pm
Followed by:5 members

Timer

00:00

Your Answer

A

B

C

D

E

Global Stats

Let Carla's money = c
Let Nora's money = n
Let Wanda's money = m
Given that c+n+w = $48
Target question => how much money does Carla have?
i.e what is the value of C.
Statement 1: The positive difference between the amounts of money that Carla and Nora have is $12.
This means that n-c=$12 or c-n=$12. So, either Nora has $12 more than Carla or Carla has $12 more than Nora. This does not provide the exact value of c, and since the target question cannot be answered. Hence, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT.

Statement 2: Nora and Wanda have the same amount of money.
This does not provide any information on the money with Carla. Hence, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT.

Combining both statements together:
From statement 1 => n-c=$12 or c-n=$12
From statement 2 => n=w
Let the value of n=a, hence w=a
From question stem, c+n+w=48
2 cases derived from statement 1; n=12+c or c=12+n; if n=12+c.
c+12+c+9=48 => c+12+c+12+c=48
=> 3c + 24 = 48
c = 8
If c=12+n, where n=a
12+a+a+a=48 => 12+3a=48
3a=36
a=12
Therefore, c=12+a. then c=12+12=24
Since this does not provide a definite answer, then, both statement combined are NOT SUFFICIENT.
Answer = option E