Answer:
B. After the charge was instated, customers who used cash for purchases totaling two dollars or more spent more, on average, than customers who used credit cards for these purchases.
Step-by-step explanation:
Since the average transaction remained almost unchanged, that means that customers who used to spend $2 or less are now spending more on average. Assuming that customers that purchase higher amounts didn't change their habits, the only way that the cash purchases equal credit card purchases is that people paying in cash buy more things.
E.g. there are 20 transactions worth more than $2 which are paid using a credit card, so the average transaction is more than $2. In order for cash purchase to have a similar mean, the some transactions will be less than $2 but other transactions must be higher in order to increase the mean of cash purchases: 15 cash transactions worth $1 and 5 cash transactions worth $6, mean cash transaction = $2.25.