Multiple Choice

An economist observes that a person with limited savings chooses a stable, low-return investment, while a person with substantial wealth chooses a high-risk, high-return venture. To determine if this difference in behavior is caused purely by their financial situations, the economist constructs a thought experiment where both individuals are hypothetically given the exact same, large amount of wealth. For this thought experiment to validly conclude that the initial financial situation was the sole driver of their different choices, what is the most critical underlying assumption the economist must make about the two individuals?

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Updated 2025-09-18

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