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
Find where steady-state economists describe what limits the economy; they point to nature's physical limits (e.g., limited regeneration of resources and waste absorption). Match the choice that names that environmental limit.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.In the view of steady-state economists, which one of the following is a noneconomic constraint as referred to in the third sentence of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Steady-state economists identify environmental limits as the noneconomic constraints. The passage states that nature's limited capacity to regenerate raw material and absorb waste suggests an optimal economic size, so the capacity of nature to absorb waste is the noneconomic constraint referred to.
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