Multiple Choice

An economic model is built on two principles: 1) A population will grow if living standards rise above a basic survival level, and 2) adding more workers to a fixed amount of land eventually decreases the output per worker. This model predicts that a one-time technological improvement will only lead to a larger population, with living standards ultimately returning to the survival level. A major historical critique points out that during the Industrial Revolution, continuous technological progress occurred alongside both a rising population and a sustained increase in average living standards. This critique most directly challenges which implicit assumption of the model's logic?

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Updated 2025-07-22

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