Hi, to those people deriding the question, it is a classic gmat trap. You are more likely to learn by doing hard questions of this type than ignoring and moving on.
Since most are falling for E,
E says: Wages are lower in X than Y.
This is a classic gmat trap : Showing one condition while ignoring the rest conditions.
Lets assume wages are lower in X than Y.
Cool.
What about raw materials?
What about logistics?
What about quality of labor?
And most importantly: Are the wages lower enough
...
Since most are falling for E,
E says: Wages are lower in X than Y.
This is a classic gmat trap : Showing one condition while ignoring the rest conditions.
Lets assume wages are lower in X than Y.
Cool.
What about raw materials?
What about logistics?
What about quality of labor?
And most importantly: Are the wages lower enough
...



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