Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
A speculative bubble is when prices climb because people hope to resell to others, not because the item itself earns value, and then prices crash. Mackay called the 1600s Dutch tulip market a bubble because rare tulip bulbs got very expensive and then collapsed. Garber agrees prices rose and fell but says that happened for normal reasons: an original rare bulb can be worth a lot at first, but as it reproduces many cheap descendant bulbs the price falls — and the original owner can still profit from selling many descendants — so the rise-and-fall doesn’t prove it was an irrational speculative bubble.
Logic Breakdown
Read the sentence with 'standard pricing pattern' and the immediately following sentences describing price behavior for new varieties (initial high price for originals, then rapid decline as reproduction increases) to determine which meaning fits.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.The phrase "standard pricing pattern " as used in the third sentence of the last paragraph most nearly means a pricing pattern
Correct Answer
D
'Garber argues that a standard pricing pattern occurs for new varieties of flowers. When a particularly prized variety is developed, its original bulb sells for a high price. ... However, as the prized bulbs become more readily available through reproduction from the original bulb, their price falls rapidly; after less than 30 years, bulbs sell at reproduction cost.' These sentences describe a typical, recurring sequence of price behavior for new varieties (initial spike then decline). Thus 'standard pricing pattern' most nearly means a pricing pattern 'that regularly recurs in certain types of cases.'
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