Evaluating a Development Policy Proposal
A historical study of a region in South America found that communities once subjected to a forced labor system now exhibit approximately 25% lower household consumption, a 6 percentage point increase in child stunting, and a greater likelihood of engaging in subsistence farming compared to neighboring communities. An international development agency is proposing an intervention in this region focused solely on providing microloans to farmers for purchasing modern agricultural equipment, with the goal of boosting their integration into commercial markets. Based only on the specific findings of the historical study, critically evaluate the potential effectiveness and completeness of the agency's proposed plan. Justify your evaluation.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Mita Policy's Effect on Hacienda Development and Land Tenure
Source for Explanations of the Mita System's Persistent Effects (Dell's Paper, Section 4)
A historical economic study compares adjacent communities, one group historically subjected to a forced labor system and a control group that was not. The study's key findings indicate that in the present day, the communities from the forced labor group exhibit approximately 25% lower household consumption and a 6 percentage point higher rate of child stunting. Which of the following statements represents the most precise interpretation of these specific results?
Applying Findings on Long-Term Institutional Impact
Summarizing the Enduring Economic Impacts of a Historical Labor System
Evaluating the Significance of Historical Economic Impacts
A key finding from a major economic study on the long-term effects of a historical forced labor system in South America is that present-day communities that were subjected to the system have, on average, 25% higher rates of child stunting.
A landmark study examined the long-term economic consequences of a historical forced labor system in parts of South America. Match each present-day outcome observed in the affected communities with its corresponding quantitative finding from the study.
A prominent economic study analyzed the persistent effects of a historical forced labor system in South America by comparing adjacent communities. The findings revealed that, centuries later, the communities that had been subjected to the system have household consumption levels that are approximately ____ percent lower than those in communities that were not.
A historical study found that communities once subjected to a forced labor system now have approximately 25% lower household consumption, a 6 percentage point increase in child stunting, and a greater likelihood of engaging in subsistence farming compared to neighboring communities. Based on these findings, which statement offers the most direct and logical explanation for how these outcomes might be interconnected?
A landmark economic study compared adjacent communities in South America, some of which were subjected to a historical forced labor system over 200 years ago. The study's key findings show that, in the present day, the communities from the forced labor group exhibit approximately 25% lower household consumption, a 6 percentage point higher rate of child stunting, and a greater likelihood of engaging in subsistence farming. Based strictly on these specific findings, which of the following conclusions is NOT directly supported?
Evaluating a Development Policy Proposal