A polling company reports that there is a 40% chance that a certain candidate will win the next election. If the candidate wins, there is a 60% chance that she will sign Bill X and no other bills. If she decides not to sign Bill X, she will sign either Bill Y or Bill Z, chosen randomly. What is the chance that the candidate will sign Bill Z?
A. 10
B. 8
C. 6
D. 4
E. 5
The OA is B.
Please, can someone assist me with this PS questions? I don't have clear what can I do to solve it. Thanks in advance!
A polling company reports that there is a 40% chance that
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Hi All,
We're told that a polling company reports that there is a 40% chance that a certain candidate will win the next election. If the candidate wins, there is a 60% chance that she will sign Bill X and no other bills. If she does not to sign Bill X, she will sign either Bill Y or Bill Z, chosen randomly. The 'intent' of this question is to ask for the percentage chance that the candidate will sign Bill Z.
To start, this is an oddly-worded question, but it's essentially a big Probability question (with each additional 'step' decreasing the probability of the end result). For Bill Z to get signed, a number of events have to occur first:
-This one candidate must win the election. (40% chance)
-The candidate must NOT sign Bill X. (40% chance)
-Between Bill Y and Bill Z, Bill Z must be the one that's randomly chosen (50% chance)
The probability of all of these events occurring is (.4)(.4)(.5) = .080 = 8%
Final Answer: B
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
We're told that a polling company reports that there is a 40% chance that a certain candidate will win the next election. If the candidate wins, there is a 60% chance that she will sign Bill X and no other bills. If she does not to sign Bill X, she will sign either Bill Y or Bill Z, chosen randomly. The 'intent' of this question is to ask for the percentage chance that the candidate will sign Bill Z.
To start, this is an oddly-worded question, but it's essentially a big Probability question (with each additional 'step' decreasing the probability of the end result). For Bill Z to get signed, a number of events have to occur first:
-This one candidate must win the election. (40% chance)
-The candidate must NOT sign Bill X. (40% chance)
-Between Bill Y and Bill Z, Bill Z must be the one that's randomly chosen (50% chance)
The probability of all of these events occurring is (.4)(.4)(.5) = .080 = 8%
Final Answer: B
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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BTGmoderatorLU wrote:A polling company reports that there is a 40% chance that a certain candidate will win the next election. If the candidate wins, there is a 60% chance that she will sign Bill X and no other bills. If she decides not to sign Bill X, she will sign either Bill Y or Bill Z, chosen randomly. What is the chance that the candidate will sign Bill Z?
A. 10
B. 8
C. 6
D. 4
E. 5
The candidate will win with 40% = 2/5 probability.
After she wins, she will sign Bill X with 60% = 3/5 probability; therefore, she has a 40% = 2/5 chance of signing other bills. Since she will sign either Bill Y or Bill Z with an equal chance, she has a 50% = 1/2 probability of signing Bill Z. Therefore, if she is elected, the probability she will sign Bill Z is
2/5 x 2/5 x 1/2 = 2/25 = 8/100 = 8%.
Answer: B
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Chance of winning election = 40%
Chance of selecting y or z if she won= (100-60)=40%
Since she selects randomly between y and z, chance of selecting z if she wins = 40/2= 20%
So, overall chance of selecting z= 40%*20%= 8%
________________________________________
Shahrukh Moin Khan
QA Mentor at Breakspace
https://www.mbabreakspace.com
PGDM: IIM Calcutta
B.Tech IIT Roorkee
Chance of selecting y or z if she won= (100-60)=40%
Since she selects randomly between y and z, chance of selecting z if she wins = 40/2= 20%
So, overall chance of selecting z= 40%*20%= 8%
________________________________________
Shahrukh Moin Khan
QA Mentor at Breakspace
https://www.mbabreakspace.com
PGDM: IIM Calcutta
B.Tech IIT Roorkee
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