Formulating a Valid Conclusion from a Natural Experiment
An economic historian observes that after World War II, West Germany, with its market-based economy, experienced significantly faster economic growth and higher living standards than centrally-planned East Germany. Based only on this specific historical observation, what is the most precise and defensible conclusion one can draw about the relationship between these economic systems and economic outcomes?
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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
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A political analyst makes the following claim: 'The dramatic divergence in living standards between East and West Germany after their division is definitive proof that market-based economies will always and everywhere outperform centrally planned economies.' What is the most significant logical weakness in this analyst's conclusion?
Interpreting a Natural Economic Experiment
Evaluating a Dominant Firm's Competitive Strategy
Evaluating Evidence from a Natural Experiment
The economic outcomes in post-war East and West Germany, where the market-based West prospered while the centrally-planned East stagnated, definitively prove that a centrally planned economy can never achieve the same level of long-term prosperity as a market-based economy, regardless of any other historical or cultural context.
Evaluating Economic Arguments
An economist is analyzing the results of the post-war German 'natural experiment,' where West Germany's market economy grew rapidly while East Germany's centrally planned economy stagnated. Match each of the following conclusions with the most accurate assessment of its validity, based only on the evidence from this specific German case.
Formulating a Valid Conclusion from a Natural Experiment
An economic historian studies the period after World War II and observes that West Germany, with its market-based system, experienced significantly faster economic growth and higher living standards than East Germany, which had a centrally planned economy. Based solely on this specific historical observation, what is the most precise and justifiable conclusion the historian can draw?
Critiquing a Research Design
Evaluating Evidence from a Natural Experiment