An economic historian is studying a pre-modern society over a 300-year period. Match each of the historian's observations with the most likely economic interpretation, assuming the society operates under the principles of an economy where population growth responds to changes in income.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.1 Prosperity, inequality, and planetary limits - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
A pre-modern agricultural society develops a new, more efficient crop rotation system. Historical records from the following two centuries show that the total food production of the society doubled. However, these records also indicate that the society's population nearly doubled in the same period, and the average daily calorie intake per person remained essentially unchanged at a basic subsistence level. Which economic principle is best illustrated by this historical outcome?
Technology, Population, and Living Standards in Pre-Modern Economies
A historian observes a pre-industrial society that, over a century, adopted significant agricultural innovations like improved irrigation and new crop varieties. The historian concludes that because the society's total economic output tripled during this period, the average person must have become significantly wealthier. Is this conclusion necessarily correct, given the economic dynamics common to such societies?
Interpreting Pre-Modern Economic History
Interpreting Pre-Modern Economic History
Explaining Stagnant Living Standards in a Pre-Modern Economy
An economic historian examines a pre-modern society that, over several centuries, developed advanced irrigation systems and more productive crop varieties. Despite a significant increase in total food production, archaeological evidence suggests that the average person's height, a common indicator of nutrition and health, did not change. Which of the following provides the best explanation for this apparent paradox?
An economic historian is studying a pre-modern society over a 300-year period. Match each of the historian's observations with the most likely economic interpretation, assuming the society operates under the principles of an economy where population growth responds to changes in income.
A pre-modern agricultural economy, initially stable with its population at a subsistence level of income, introduces a new, more productive variety of wheat. Arrange the following events in the logical sequence that would be expected to unfold over the subsequent decades.
Advising a Pre-Modern Ruler