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Core Assumptions of the Poverty Trap Model
A model of a pre-industrial economy predicts that any technological advance will only lead to a temporary improvement in living standards before they return to a subsistence level. This self-correcting mechanism is driven by two key assumptions about how the economy and population behave. Identify and explain these two core assumptions, detailing how each one contributes to trapping the society at a subsistence income level in the long run.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Widespread Acceptance of the Malthusian Poverty Trap
Technological Advance in a Pre-Industrial Society
A small bakery operates with a single oven of a fixed size. The owner finds that hiring a second baker more than doubles the daily production of bread compared to when only one baker was working. Based on this initial observation, it is logical to conclude that hiring an eighth baker will also lead to a similarly large, proportional increase in daily bread production.
A pre-industrial society, where living standards are at a subsistence level, experiences a significant technological innovation that increases food production. According to the logic of a self-correcting poverty trap, arrange the following events in the sequence they are most likely to occur over the long run.
A pre-industrial agricultural society discovers a new, more resilient crop variety, which significantly increases the food yield per acre. According to the logic of a self-correcting poverty trap, what is the most likely long-run consequence of this innovation for the average person's living standards in this society?
A pre-industrial agricultural society discovers a new, more resilient crop variety, which significantly increases the food yield per acre. According to the logic of a self-correcting poverty trap, what is the most likely long-run consequence of this innovation for the average person's living standards in this society?
Core Assumptions of the Poverty Trap Model
The Dynamics of Stagnation
Match each event in a pre-industrial economy with its direct consequence, according to the logic of a self-correcting poverty trap.
In a pre-industrial society constrained by fixed agricultural land, a one-time distribution of a large food surplus to all families would permanently raise the population's average living standards above the subsistence level.
Consider a pre-industrial society with a fixed amount of agricultural land. A major technological advance significantly increases food production. Simultaneously, a widespread social change results in the population size remaining constant, even as incomes rise. According to the principles that explain a self-correcting poverty trap, what is the most likely long-term consequence for the average living standard in this society?