Library/PT 138/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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 author's causal chain: increasing returns → lower unit costs for large firms → large firms drive out small firms → monopoly. Choose the option that blocks increased size from producing net cost advantages.

Passage Stimulus

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22.

Which one of the following, if true, would most undermine the connection that the author draws between increased size and monopoly power?

Correct Answer
E
The passage explicitly links increasing size/specialization to lower costs and thus a tendency toward monopoly: 'the parable of the pin factory says that there are increasing returns to scale—the bigger the pin factory, the more specialized its workers can be, and therefore the more pins the factory can produce per worker' and 'But increasing returns create a natural tendency toward monopoly, because a large business can achieve larger scale and hence lower costs than a small business.' Choice E says that additional specialization's productivity gains are offset by higher training costs and turnover, so increasing size would not produce the net lower unit costs the author relies on to explain a tendency toward monopoly. By denying the net cost advantage of greater size, E directly undermines the author's connection between increased size and monopoly power.
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