Population Recovery and Wage Decline in England (16th-17th Centuries)
Following the period of high wages after the Black Death, England's population began to recover in the 16th century. This growth in the labor supply led to a reassertion of Malthusian pressures, causing a significant drop in real wages. Data from the period illustrates this inverse relationship: as the population grew from 2.6 million in 1505 to 4.7 million by 1615, the corresponding wage index plummeted from a high of 91 down to 57.

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In a pre-industrial economy where living standards are inversely linked to population size, a major plague that halves the labor force would be expected to cause a permanent, long-term increase in real wages for all subsequent generations.
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An economic historian examines data from pre-industrial England and observes that between 1350 and 1450, real wages for laborers rose significantly. A critic argues, 'This wage increase was not caused by the population decline from the plague, but rather by the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, which gave workers unprecedented bargaining power.' Based on an economic model where living standards are inversely tied to population size, which of the following statements best analyzes the critic's argument?
An economic model of pre-industrial England posits a recurring cycle where a decrease in population leads to higher real wages, and a subsequent increase in population causes those wages to fall back to their original level. Which of the following hypothetical discoveries would most seriously weaken the claim that this population-driven cycle is the primary explanation for economic changes between 1300 and 1600?
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Malthusian Stagnation in England (c. 1600)
Historical data from England shows that between the early 1500s and the early 1600s, the population grew from approximately 2.6 million to 4.7 million. During the same period, a real wage index fell from a high of 91 to 57. Based on the principles of supply and demand, what is the most direct economic explanation for the relationship between these two trends?
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The growth of England's population from 2.6 million to 4.7 million between the early 16th and early 17th centuries indicates a period of rising worker productivity, which led to improved living standards and higher real wages.
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Match each historical period in pre-industrial England with the dominant economic relationship between population and real wages that characterized it.
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Historical data for England shows that the population grew from 2.6 million in 1505 to 4.7 million by 1615. Over the same period, the real wage index, which started at a high of 91, fell to 57. This represents a decline in real wages of approximately ____ percent. (Round to the nearest whole number).
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