Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Both passages explain why richer people seem happier than poorer people at a moment in time, yet societies don’t get happier as they get richer. Passage A says this is because people quickly get used to higher incomes (habituation) and care about how they rank versus similar others (rivalry), so rising incomes push up what people consider “enough”; a study showed most people prefer being relatively better off even if their absolute income is lower, and East Germans felt worse after reunification because they began comparing themselves to West Germans. Passage B rejects the idea that this is just showing off and says money mainly matters because it signals success and value creation—feeling successful, not money itself, brings happiness.
Logic Breakdown
Passage A (supporting "misguided"): "Two phenomena—habituation and rivalry—push up the norm." and "We do not foresee how we adjust to material possessions, so we overinvest in acquiring them, at the expense of leisure." These lines show the author views the desire to have more than neighbors as driven by rivalry and habituation and resulting in overinvestment with little lasting benefit. Passage B (supporting "admirable"): "Rather, the data show that earning more makes people happier because relative prosperity makes them feel that they are successful, that they have created value." and "Wanting to create value benefits society. It is a bonus that it also brings happiness." These lines show Passage B interprets the same desire as evidence of creating value and as socially beneficial.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.Which one of the following pairs of terms would most likely be used by the authors of passage A and passage B, respectively, to describe a person who wants to make more money than his or her neighbors?
Correct Answer
D
Passage A treats wanting more than neighbors as a problematic consequence of habituation and rivalry (people "overinvest ... at the expense of leisure" and gains "make little difference"), so A's author would call such a person "misguided." Passage B reframes the desire as evidence of success and value creation ("they have created value"; "Wanting to create value benefits society"), so B's author would call the person "admirable." Thus the pair "misguided, admirable" fits the two authors' attitudes.
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