shubhamvyas wrote:
Intellectual property law can be subdivided into two categories: industrial property law and copyright law.
industrial property: 0.07*0.26*(175000)=3185
copyright law: 0.07*175000-3185=9065
So, 9065-4,250 (female intellectual property lawyers)=4815≈5000
Thank you, but you're still making an unjustifiable assumption... How are you concluding that 7% of those Under 30 are in IP?
You might be tempted to say ~"well, duh, just look at the pie chart". But what you're doing there is taking the 7% of *all members* shown in the pie chart and applying that to *just those Under 30*. What if those 7% are almost all in the 51-60 age bracket?
To illustrate, the following numbers are consistent with the question and charts:
- There are 5,743 people Under 30 who are in IP (and there are disproportionately more in other age groups, meaning 7% of *all members* are still in IP...)
- *All* of them are female.
- 1,493 of Under 30s in IP specialize in industrial property law (this is the 26% referenced by the question).
- 4,250 of Under 30s in IP specialize in copyright (consistent with question; this is the other 74%).
- This would make the 'correct answer': 0. There are 0 males Under 30 who are in copyright law (because all of the males Under 30 are in other practice areas, like Tax).
- Or if you like, we could come up with very different numbers that would also be consistent; the question cannot be answered...
Not to beat a dead horse, but please don't make the mistake of saying, "no, you're wrong, there are 12,250 people Under 30 who are in IP, because 175,000 * 0.07 = 12,250...; and we can see that some of them are male because the line chart indicates that..."
Not necessarily; and no you can't. Unless there is something I'm missing (entirely possible!), the pie chart simply cannot be assumed to apply to every age group individually.