Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Economists often use GNP per person to judge a country's economic health, but that average misses many things that matter for people’s real lives. Things like nutrition, life expectancy, infant survival, jobs, and access to services (education, clean water, medicine, transport, communication) show welfare more directly, even if they’re harder to measure. Higher GNP per person doesn’t always improve those human indicators, and averages can hide big inequality when a few people hold most wealth. For that reason, some countries are shifting focus from simply raising GNP per person to improving these human measures, since better human indicators lead to healthier societies even if GNP stays low.
Logic Breakdown
Determine the author's overall thesis: the passage rejects per capita GNP as the sole measure and argues that human indicators are preferable; choose the title that captures that claim.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage1.Which one of the following titles most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
C
Correct. The passage's main point is that human indicators are superior measures of a nation's economic health compared with per capita GNP. Support: "human indicators, while sometimes more difficult to calculate or document, provide sounder measures of a nation's progress than does the indicator championed by these economists." Also: "some nations have begun to realize that their domestic economic efforts are better directed away from attempting to raise per capita GNP and instead toward ensuring that the conditions measured by human indicators are salutary." These statements state the thesis summarized by title C.
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