Analyzing an Economic Shock
An agrarian society's economy is governed by a single, well-established principle: as the number of people working a fixed amount of land increases, the average output per worker decreases. Imagine this society experiences a sudden plague that reduces the working population by 30%. Based only on the principle described, what is the immediate effect on the average output per worker? More importantly, explain why this principle alone is insufficient to predict whether the society will eventually return to its original, pre-plague levels of population and average output.
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Social Science
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CORE Econ
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.1 Prosperity, inequality, and planetary limits - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
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Malthusian Assumption: Population Grows When Living Standards Rise
An economic historian studying a pre-industrial society finds strong evidence for the following relationship: as the number of farmers working the land increased, the average output per farmer decreased. The historian concludes, 'This relationship alone is sufficient to explain why, for centuries, both the population size and the average living standard in this society remained trapped at a low, stable level.' Which of the following statements best analyzes the logical completeness of the historian's conclusion?
Sufficiency of an Economic Principle
Match each term related to the construction of an economic index with its correct description.
The economic principle stating that an increase in the number of workers on a fixed amount of land will eventually lead to a decrease in the average output per worker is, by itself, a sufficient explanation for why a society might experience a long-term, stable equilibrium with both low population and low living standards.
The economic principle stating that an increase in the number of workers on a fixed amount of land will eventually lead to a decrease in the average output per worker is, by itself, a sufficient explanation for why a society might experience a long-term, stable equilibrium with both low population and low living standards.
Critique of a Simplified Economic Model
Evaluating a Simplified Economic Prediction
An economic model for a pre-industrial society is based on a single principle: as the population of workers increases on a fixed amount of land, the average output per worker decreases. This relationship is shown to be true for the society. However, this principle alone cannot fully explain why the society experienced centuries of stagnation, with both population and living standards remaining stable at a low level. What additional component is necessary to create a complete model of this long-run stagnation?
Analyzing an Economic Shock
Incomplete Explanation for Economic Stagnation