A pre-industrial society's population is growing, leading to a decrease in the average food output per farmer. Match each specific scenario below with the Malthusian cause of diminishing average product of labor it best illustrates.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Generational Growth and Diminishing Labor Productivity
Analyzing Declining Agricultural Output
A farming community's population grows over several decades. To feed the larger population, they not only add more farmers to their original, highly fertile fields but also begin cultivating new, rockier land on nearby hills. After these changes, the overall average food output per farmer for the entire community has decreased. Which of the following statements best analyzes the two distinct causes for this decline in average labor productivity?
A pre-industrial society's population is growing, leading to a decrease in the average food output per farmer. Match each specific scenario below with the Malthusian cause of diminishing average product of labor it best illustrates.
Contrasting Causes of Diminishing Labor Productivity
Explaining Declining Agricultural Productivity
A key argument within the Malthusian framework is that the diminishing average product of labor occurs solely because adding more farmers to a fixed plot of land leads to lower individual output.
Evaluating Competing Explanations for Agricultural Decline
Analyzing Productivity Declines in Two Farming Models
A pre-industrial farming community cultivates a single, large, fertile plain. Over a generation, the population doubles, and the number of farmers working this same plain also doubles. No new land is brought into cultivation. Observers note that the average amount of grain harvested per farmer has fallen. According to the Malthusian framework, which specific principle is demonstrated by this scenario?
Evaluating Agricultural Expansion Strategies
Cultivating Inferior Land as a Cause of Diminishing Average Product of Labor