Gustavoncf wrote:
To attract the most talented workers, some companies are offering a wider range of benefits, letting employees pick those most important to them.
When I did this question, I thought there was an ambiguity problem in the use of 'them':
...letting employees pick those most important to them (to the employees)
or
...letting employees pick those most important to them (to the companies)
Reading the replies I saw that it wasn't the case. Can someone please explain the error in myreasoning?
As we mentioned earlier in the thread, pronoun ambiguity isn't an absolute rule on the GMAT. As long as it's reasonably clear what the pronoun should logically refer to, it's okay if there are technically multiple options.
In this case, it's pretty obvious that the benefits picked by the employees are going to be important to the employees who are picking those benefits. The company doesn't really care, for example, whether an employee elects to pay an extra monthly premium to get the dental plan.
For
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Statistics : Posted by GMATNinja • on 02 Jun 2017, 01:53 • Replies 79 • Views 115193










