When a city experiences a sharp decline in population, the city's tax revenues, which pay for such city services as police protection and maintenance of water lines, also decrease. The area to be policed and the number and length of the water lines to be maintained, however, do not decrease. Attempting to make up the tax revenue lost by raising tax rates is not feasible, since higher tax rates would cause even more residents to leave.
The information given most strongly supports which of the following general claims?
If, in a city with sharply declining population, police protection and water line maintenance do not deteriorate, some other service previously provided by the city will deteriorate or be eliminated.
If a city's tax rates are held stable over a period of time, neither the population nor the levels of city services provided will tend to decline over that period.
If a city's population declines sharply, police protection and water line maintenance are the services that deteriorate most immediately and most markedly.
A city that suffers revenue losses because of a sharp decline in population can make up some of the lost tax revenue by raising tax rates, provided the city's tax rates are low in relation to those of other cities.
A city that is losing residents because tax rates are perceived as too high by those residents can reverse this population trend by bringing its tax rates down to a more moderate level.
不可以推理 税收减少 人变多 也不可以推理税收稳定 人不变 原文根本没有提到过这两个 只能根据原文给的信息来做出选择
登录 或 注册 后可以参加讨论