by RonPurewal Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:02 am
first, realize that the $1.6bn figure is irrelevant, since everything else in the problem is stated purely in terms of percentages. therefore, you should concentrate only on percentages.
(2) alone
- to try to make country x NOT in the top six, distribute the percentages as evenly as possible: it's possible that each of the six highest-contributing countries paid 67.8/6 = 11.3 percent of the total. if that were the case, then country x, at 4.8%, would be lower than sixth place.
- to try to get country x INTO the top six, make the distribution as lopsided as possible: say one country paid 60% of everything. then country x could be second at 4.8%, and the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th place countries could combine to pay 67.8 - 64.8%.
INSUFFICIENT
(1) alone
taken alone, this condition only tells you that country x is in fifth place or lower.
INSUFFICIENT
(together)
the fifth- and sixth-place countries together paid out 67.8 - 56 = 11.8 percent of the total. at this point the strategy is roughly the same as for statement (2) alone:
- to try to make country x NOT in the top six, distribute the percentages as evenly as possible: the fifth- and sixth-place countries could both have contributed 11.8/2 = 5.9 percent. this would mean country x = not in the top six.
- to try to get country x INTO the top six, let the fifth-place country pay 11.8 - 4.8 = 7 percent; therefore country x is in sixth place.
INSUFFICIENT
answer = e