Reading comp PrepTest 106 · Section 4 · Question 14
Passage
Passage walkthrough
Topic: Social Science
Paragraph 1
- Paragraph note
- Steady-state economics, a new school of economic thought, offers an alternative to neoclassical economics
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Neoclassical economics: dominates Western economic thought
- Holds that economy is a closed system with no noneconomic constraints (second - third sentences)
- Growth is limitless (third sentence)
- Growth is crucial to eliminating economic problems that arise (fourth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “seriously challenged” (first sentence); “reigning school” (first sentence); “circular flow” (second sentence); “no noneconomic constraints” (third sentence); “some argue “ (fourth sentence); “they claim” (fourth sentence)
- Neoclassical economics: dominates Western economic thought
Paragraph 2
- Paragraph note
- Steady-state economics holds that economy is limited by natural resources and has an optimal size
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Natural resources enter and exit economy; economy grows, stagnates, or shrinks depending on availability of resources (second sentence)
- Because natural resources are limited, there is an optimal size to the economy beyond which cost to nature is greater than benefit to people (third sentence)
- Economy should be maintained in equilibrium with nature (fourth sentence)
- Neoclassical economists hold that, if natural resources are depleted, human-made resources can be substituted (fifth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “unrealistic” (first sentence); “they argue” (second sentence); “nature’s limited capacity” (third sentence); “optimal size” (third sentence); “dangerous” (fourth sentence); “only alternative” (fourth sentence); “equilibrium with nature” (fourth sentence)
Paragraph 3
- Paragraph note
- Steady-state economists propose that conservation can be used to satisfy human wants without using more natural resources
- Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
- Steady-state economists:
- Disparity b/w monetary value of goods/services and sustainable personal consumption (first sentence)
- Western economies already larger than optimal size (first sentence)
- End economic growth by using conservation (second-third sentence)
- Conservation through recycling is still qualitative growth; is not quantitative (fourth sentence)
- Successful steady-state economy will conserve without growth, while still meeting human wants (fifth sentence)
- Author’s attitude: “widening disparity” (first sentence); “already exceeded” (first sentence); “alternatives to growth” (second sentence); “differs from growth in that it is qualitative, not quantitative” (fourth sentence); “success of a steady-state economy” (fifth sentence)
- Steady-state economists:
Main Point: Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible.
Key Lines?Paragraph 1, Sentence 1 (P1 S1) - Steady-state vs. neoclassical economics
P2 S4 - Steady state economists: economy must be in equilibrium with nature
P3 S1 - SS economists: Western economies already larger than they should be
P3 S4 - SS economists: conserve resources rather than grow economy
Meta-Structure?Describing a Debate: This passage highlights the points at which steady-state economic thinking and neoclassical economic thinking clash, principally, the degree to which Western economies are limited by natural resources and the optimal goal of economic activity (growth vs. conservation/recycling). The author of the passage first summarizes neoclassical economic thinking. According to neoclassicists, the economy is not limited by any noneconomic factors, and the major goal of participants in the economy should be to maximize growth. The author then lays out the steady-state economic model: the economy is limited by the availability of natural resources and Western economies have already grown beyond their optimal size. Thus, peoples’ economic goal should be to conserve resources by recycling rather than to use more natural resources because nature can’t replenish them as fast as humans use them.
The debate, then, is this: neoclassicists say that the economy is not too big and it should continue to grow while steady-staters say the economy is too big and should not continue to grow. The reason steady-staters give for their position is that natural resources are being depleted too fast.
The minor Meta-Structure used in this passage is Comparison. The author is continually comparing neoclassical economics with steady-state economics; indeed, it is the contrast with neoclassical economics that helps give steady-state economics its character.
The author’s own position is hinted at throughout the passage and particularly in P3 S5, where the author implies that it is possible to conserve resources by recycling and still to satisfy human wants, thus proving that an economy can be considered successful, even in a steady (or stagnant) state. However, these hints are not enough to tip this passage over into the “Resolving a Debate” Meta-Structure, because the author does not explicitly take a side in the debate or try to reconcile the two sides of the issue.
Last Thoughts?This passage can be thought of as a bit of a hybrid, or a Resolving a Debate Plus. The “plus” is the hint that the author gives as to their perspective in P2 S4 (referring to the neoclassical model as “dangerous” and asserting that living in harmony with nature is the “only alternative” to the current model) and P3 S4 (referring to the fact that conservation constitutes qualitative rather than quantitative progress and leads to increased efficiency of resource use). Though all of these references are ostensibly the author referring to the views of steady-state economists rather than giving their own opinion, the language is strong, especially the word “dangerous,” and it is possible to infer that the author inclines to the steady-state model. We can be even more sure of this when we remember that in P1 S1, the author said that steady-state economics “seriously challenged” neoclassical economics.
That said, the author’s opinion is not explicit enough to reclassify this passage as either Resolving a Debate or Old Approach/New Approach.
Question prompt
Why the credited answer is right
Credited answer: D
The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.
Question Type
Strategy Overview
Answer Anticipation
Answer choices
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ANeoclassical economists, who, unlike Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice A is not credited
(A) Does this answer choice match the main point we anticipated (“Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible”)?
No. This answer choice is entirely accurate, but it is not the main point of the passage. Most of the passage is about steady-state economics. This is evident in the fact that the lion’s share of the passage is devoted to steady-state economics and in the fact that the topic sentences of all three paragraphs are about steady-state rather than neoclassical economics. This is not the right answer choice because it is about neoclassical economics.
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BSome neoclassical economists, who, Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice B is not credited
(B) Does this answer choice match the main point we anticipated (“Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible”)?
No. This answer choice, again, is entirely accurate according to P1 S4, but it is not the main point of the passage. The passage is about steady-state economics, as evidenced by the amount of material devoted to it, and by the topics of the first sentences of each paragraph, not about neoclassical economics. So this answer choice, which deals with neoclassical economics, can’t be the main point of the passage.
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CSome steady–state economists, who, Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice C is not credited
(C) Does this answer choice match the main point we anticipated (“Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible”)?
No. This answer choice is accurate and is a very strong contender, but it is not the main point because it does not capture the crucial conclusion of the steady-state economists’ argument.
Let’s break this answer choice down. First, steady-staters do believe that unlimited growth is neither possible nor desirable (P2 S1, P2 S3), and that Western economies should limit growth using conservation strategies (P3 S4-5). They also tacitly concede that conservation could lead to stagnation (P3 S2), but their main point, as expressed in P3 S2 and P3 S4-5, is that even a stagnant economy that is conserving resources rather than using new ones can still satisfy “human wants.” The argument of the steady-state economists has a positive rather than a negative tone; in order to counter the neoclassical economists’ pejorative usage of the word “stagnation” (P3 S2), they argue that a steady-state economy can still “satisfy the wants of producers and consumers” (P3 S5).
So the main point of this passage, which is largely devoted to the arguments of the steady-state economists, will emphasize the positive aspects of conservation and the steady-state economy rather than the negative ones. For this reason, (C) is not the right choice.
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DSome steady–state economists, who, Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice D matches the stem
(D) Does this answer choice match the main point we anticipated (“Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible”)?
Yes. This answer choice does everything we anticipated, plus it satisfies the criterion we identified in our analysis of (C); it puts a positive spin on the steady-staters’ argument by emphasizing the steady-state economy’s ability to satisfy “human wants.”
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ESteady–state and neoclassical economists, Remaining source text redacted.
Why choice E is not credited
(E) Does this answer choice match the main point we anticipated (“Steady-state economics, which holds that Western economies are limited by nature and should opt to conserve rather than grow white still satisfying human wants, presents an alternative to neoclassical economics, which holds that economies are not limited by nature and should aim to grow as much as possible”)?
No. This answer choice is inaccurate. Steady-state economists believe that natural resources enter the economy and then leave the economy; they don’t go around and around between producers and consumers (P2 S2). Also, steady-state economists don’t think the goal of an economy should be to increase exchange value; they believe that conservation of resources will lead to a “qualitative” rather than a “quantitative” measure of progress (P3 S4).
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