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Cause–effect classification in power supply: rural and semi-urban areas face load shedding; if the crisis persists, urban areas will also face load shedding — identify whether these are effects of a common cause or direct cause–effect

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Both the statements I and II are effects of some common cause

Explanation:

Given data

  • I: Rural and semi-urban areas have been suffering load shedding.
  • II: If the Government cannot overcome the power crisis, load shedding will extend to urban areas.

Concept/Approach

Both statements describe outcomes of a single underlying issue: a power shortage (the common cause). The first is a present effect; the second is a projected effect of the same cause if unresolved.

Step-by-step reasoning
1) Common cause: power crisis (supply < demand).2) Effect now: load shedding in rural/semi-urban (I).3) Effect later (if unresolved): load shedding in urban areas (II).

Verification/Alternative

Neither statement produces the other; both trace back to the shortage.

Common pitfalls

  • Linking I as the cause of II instead of seeing both as effects of the shortage.

Final Answer
Both the statements I and II are effects of some common cause.

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