Breakup of total expenses of the five divisions M, N, O, P and Q of company X
Note -: The figure shown is not necessarily to scale.
The figure above shows a circle graph. The circle has a centre of C and gives the division wise breakup of the total expenses of company X in terms of percentages. How many of the five divisions have an expense which is more than the average (arithmetic mean) of the expenses of the five divisions?
(1) a > 19 > b > c > d > e
(2) a > 21 > b > c > d > e
Breakup of total expenses
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Hi Mechmeera,
You'll likely find that a mixture of conceptual thinking and TESTing VALUES will help you to deal with this situation.
We're told that the pie chart represents TOTAL expenses, so we know that we're dealing with 100% of the expenses. Since there are 5 divisions, we also know that the AVERAGE expenses per division = 100/5 = 20% of the total.
The question asks how many divisions have expenses that are MORE than the average (meaning MORE than 20%).
Fact 1: A > 19 > B > C > D > E
For the average to be 20%, AT LEAST one of the five divisions must be greater than 20%. Here, there's only one possible division that fits that rule (Division A); all of the other divisions are LESS than 19%. Thus, the answer to the question is 1 division.
Fact 1 is SUFFICIENT
Fact 2: A > 21 > B > C > D > E
Here, we could have a few different possibilities:
IF....A,B,C,D,E are...
26, 20, 19, 18, 17 then the answer to the question is 1 division
IF...A,B,C,D,E are....
26, 20.5, 19, 18, 16.5 then the answer to the question is 2 divisions
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT
Final Answer: A
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
You'll likely find that a mixture of conceptual thinking and TESTing VALUES will help you to deal with this situation.
We're told that the pie chart represents TOTAL expenses, so we know that we're dealing with 100% of the expenses. Since there are 5 divisions, we also know that the AVERAGE expenses per division = 100/5 = 20% of the total.
The question asks how many divisions have expenses that are MORE than the average (meaning MORE than 20%).
Fact 1: A > 19 > B > C > D > E
For the average to be 20%, AT LEAST one of the five divisions must be greater than 20%. Here, there's only one possible division that fits that rule (Division A); all of the other divisions are LESS than 19%. Thus, the answer to the question is 1 division.
Fact 1 is SUFFICIENT
Fact 2: A > 21 > B > C > D > E
Here, we could have a few different possibilities:
IF....A,B,C,D,E are...
26, 20, 19, 18, 17 then the answer to the question is 1 division
IF...A,B,C,D,E are....
26, 20.5, 19, 18, 16.5 then the answer to the question is 2 divisions
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT
Final Answer: A
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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[email protected] wrote:Hi Mechmeera,
You'll likely find that a mixture of conceptual thinking and TESTing VALUES will help you to deal with this situation.
We're told that the pie chart represents TOTAL expenses, so we know that we're dealing with 100% of the expenses. Since there are 5 divisions, we also know that the AVERAGE expenses per division = 100/5 = 20% of the total.
The question asks how many divisions have expenses that are MORE than the average (meaning MORE than 20%).
Fact 1: A > 19 > B > C > D > E
For the average to be 20%, AT LEAST one of the five divisions must be greater than 20%. Here, there's only one possible division that fits that rule (Division A); all of the other divisions are LESS than 19%. Thus, the answer to the question is 1 division.
Fact 1 is SUFFICIENT
Fact 2: A > 21 > B > C > D > E
Here, we could have a few different possibilities:
IF....A,B,C,D,E are...
26, 20, 19, 18, 17 then the answer to the question is 1 division
IF...A,B,C,D,E are....
26, 20.5, 19, 18, 16.5 then the answer to the question is 2 divisions
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT
Final Answer: A
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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Target question: How many of the five divisions have an expense which is more than the average (arithmetic mean) of the expenses of the five divisions?Mechmeera wrote:Breakup of total expenses of the five divisions M, N, O, P and Q of company X
Note -: The figure shown is not necessarily to scale.
The figure above shows a circle graph. The circle has a centre of C and gives the division wise breakup of the total expenses of company X in terms of percentages. How many of the five divisions have an expense which is more than the average (arithmetic mean) of the expenses of the five divisions?
(1) a > 19 > b > c > d > e
(2) a > 21 > b > c > d > e
This is a great candidate for REPHRASING the target question.
IMPORTANT: If we add the percentages (a%, b%, c%, d%, and e%), we get 100%
So, the average percent share = 100%/5 = 20%
So, we can REPHRASE the target question....
REPHRASED target question: How many of the five divisions have MORE than 20% of the TOTAL expenses
Aside: We have a free video with tips on rephrasing the target question: https://www.gmatprepnow.com/module/gmat- ... cy?id=1100
Now onto the statements....
Statement 1: a > 19 > b > c > d > e
We know that b, c, d and e have less than 19% of the total expenses, which means they each have less than 20% of the TOTAL expenses.
If b, c, d and e each = less than 19%, then b+c+d+e is less than (4)(19%)
(4)(19%) = 74%, which means division a must comprise more than 26% percent of the TOTAL expenses.
So, exactly 1 division has MORE than 20% of the TOTAL expenses
Since we can answer the REPHRASED target question with certainty, statement 1 is SUFFICIENT
Statement 2: a > 21 > b > c > d > e
There are several values of a, b, c, d and e that satisfy statement 2. Here are two:
Case a: a = 23, b = 20.5, c = 19.5, d = 19 and e = 18. In this case, 2 divisions have MORE than 20% of the TOTAL expenses
Case b: a = 62, b = 11, c = 10, d = 9 and e = 8. In this case, 1 division has MORE than 20% of the TOTAL expenses
Since we cannot answer the REPHRASED target question with certainty, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT
Answer = A
Cheers,
Brent