Library/PT 106/Sec 4/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Two groups of economists disagree about growth. Neoclassical economists see the economy as a closed system of buyers and sellers and think growth can continue without limits and even help solve other problems. Steady-state economists say the economy depends on nature—resources come in and leave as products or waste—so nature’s limits mean there’s an ideal economy size, and growing past that hurts the environment more than it helps people. They suggest alternatives like conservation (using resources more efficiently and recycling) to meet people’s needs without more growth, and some say Western economies may already be too large.

Logic Breakdown

Compare what the passage says neoclassical economists believe (nature is part of the economy; resources can be substituted; no noneconomic constraints) with steady-state claims; eliminate choices neoclassicals explicitly reject and pick the one they would not necessarily deny.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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15.

Based on the passage, neoclassical economists would likely hold that steady-state economists are wrong to believe each of the following EXCEPT:

Correct Answer
A
The passage describes neoclassical economists as treating nature as part of the economic system and emphasizing substitution rather than asserting an absolute denial of environmental facts: "Neoclassical economists, on the other hand, consider nature to be just one element of the economy rather than an outside constraint, believing that natural resources, if depleted, can be replaced with other elements—i.e., human-made resources—that will allow the economy to continue with its process of unlimited growth." The passage also records the steady-state claim that "nature's limited capacity to regenerate raw material and absorb waste suggests that there is an optimal size for the economy." Because neoclassicals emphasize replacement/substitution rather than flatly denying any limit to environmental yield, they would not necessarily insist steady-state economists are wrong to say the environment's ability to yield raw material is limited—so A is the EXCEPT.
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