Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
David Warsh points out a basic clash in economics: big factories where workers specialize make goods much more cheaply, but that advantage tends to push small firms out and create monopolies. Smith’s “invisible hand” idea, however, only works when many firms compete, so the two ideas conflict. Economists mostly ignored the pin-factory idea for about two centuries because it was hard to express with math, and only in the late 1970s did they finally find ways to model it and take it seriously.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the paragraph's function—does it explain a cause, give an example, or criticize? The paragraph asks 'Why?' and explains why the diminishing-returns assumption dominated: because diminishing returns are easier to represent mathematically while increasing returns are hard to model.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage17.The main purpose of the fourth paragraph is to
Correct Answer
B
The paragraph explicitly answers 'Why?': "For almost two centuries, the assumption of diminishing returns dominated economic theory, with the Pin Factory de-emphasized. Why? As Warsh explains, it wasn't about ideology; it was about following the line of least mathematical resistance." It then states: "And the economics of diminishing returns lend themselves readily to elegant formalism, while those of increasing returns—the Pin Factory—are notoriously hard to represent mathematically." These sentences show the paragraph's main purpose is to explain the difficulty of modeling a particular economic assumption (increasing returns).
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