Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Researchers find that people hate losses more than they enjoy equal gains, so they often take bigger risks to avoid losing something they already have than they would to try to win the same amount. Economists once assumed people only gamble when the expected payoff is high, but experiments show people usually need a much larger possible gain to accept an equal chance of losing (for example, many won’t accept a 50% chance to lose $100 unless they could win over $300). The same tendency helps explain why countries sometimes take risky actions—like going to war—to recover territory they believe was taken from them, because they value getting it back more than the objective costs.
Logic Breakdown
Locate statements that connect individual loss aversion research to state behavior; find the sentences that apply the psychological finding (loss aversion → willingness to gamble to avoid losses) to governments and the Falklands example.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.It can most reasonably be inferred from the passage that the author would agree with which one of the following statements?
Correct Answer
B
The passage explicitly links individual loss-averse behavior to state behavior. It says, 'Risk-taking is thus a more common strategy for those who believe they will lose what they already possess than it is for those who wish to gain something they do not have,' and then applies this to nations: 'Such observations are quite salient to scholars of international conflict and crisis... But nations also often take huge gambles to retrieve what they perceive to have been taken from them by other nations.' The Falklands example supports the generalization: '...each viewed the islands as territory that had been taken from them by the other; thus each was willing to commit enormous resources—and risks—to recapturing them.' These sentences support the inference that governments subjectively evaluate risks over national assets much as individuals do over personal assets.
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