Reading comp PrepTest 157 · Section 1 · Question 23

Passage

 Some environmentalists claim that the higher the international debt a nation carries, the more likely it is that the quality Remaining source text redacted.
Passage walkthrough
Passage Summary Topic: Social Sciences

Paragraph 1

  • Paragraph note
    • Environmentalists' conclusion on debt/low quality of life and premises ("exports promotion hypothesis" holds that debt causes nations to harm their environments by producing many exports; governments reduce domestic spending)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Some environmentalists' views:
      • The international debt a nation carries lowers its quality of life, as repaying the debt depletes national resources, increases pollution, and decreases domestic spending (first and second sentences)
    • List of two reasons international debt lowers a nation's quality of life, according to some environmentalists:
      • "Exports promotion hypothesis": Nations shift their focus to exporting many goods, which causes more environmental damage than domestic goods (third through fifth sentences)
      • The government spends less on domestic services like healthcare, education, water, and sanitation when it carries a high debt (seventh and eighth sentences)
    • Example of the "exports promotion hypothesis," according to some environmentalists:
      • A nation might cut down forests for timber or open up land to plant cash crops (sixth sentence)
    • Example of how reducing domestic spending could harm a nation's quality of life, according to some environmentalists:
      • The government eliminates subsidies for practices that reduce pollution or conserve resources (last sentence)

Paragraph 2

  • Paragraph note
    • The author's criticism that the evidence for the environmentalists' claims (some studies don't show a correlation between debt/deforestation; cutting domestic spending can help the environment)
  • Views, minor Meta-Structures, and the author's attitude
    • Author's view:
      • The environmentalists' evidence is weak, as studies do not show a consistent correlation between debt and deforestation or pollution, and reigning in domestic spending can help the environment (first through fifth sentences)
      • So, we don't know whether a nation's quality of life is connected to the size of its debt (seventh sentence)
    • Example of how reducing domestic spending could not harm a nation's quality of life, according to the author:
      • The government might decide to abandon plans to build new dams or roads or to eliminate subsidies that promote fertilizer or pesticide use (sixth sentences sentence)
    • Author's attitude: "weak" (first sentence); "indicates that" (second sentence); "only a slight positive correlation" (third sentence); "in fact" (third sentence); "it is just as likely" (fifth sentence); "must be considered unknown" (seventh sentence); "a case could be made" (last sentence); "may rein in potentially harmful spending" (last sentence)

Main Point:

There is very little evidence to support some environmentalists' claim that the more international debt a nation carries, the more its quality of life suffers.


Meta-Structure?

Criticizing a Viewpoint: We think this passage best fits the Criticizing a Viewpoint Meta-Structure.* In such a passage, the author describes a view held by another person or group and then criticizes that view. Importantly, the author's argument should focus primarily on why the view is wrong, unjustified, or misguided.

And that's what the author does in this passage. The author focuses on the "weak" evidence for the environmentalists' argument about the relationship between a nation's international debt and quality of life (P2, S1). The author points out that there is very little evidence to support the environmentalists' claims that debt leads to deforestation and pollution or that a reduction in domestic spending will necessarily harm a nation's quality of life. In other words, the author focuses on why the environmentalists' conclusion is unjustified by the available evidence.

When a passage uses a Criticizing a Viewpoint Meta-Structure, the main point is generally the author's central criticism. So, the main point of this passage is relatively straightforward: "There is very little evidence to support some environmentalists' claim that the more international debt a nation carries, the more its quality of life suffers."

*As is often the case for passages that fall into the Critical Meta-Structure family, several other major Critical Meta-Structures could describe this passage. If you labeled this as a Rebutting Critics or Correcting the Record passage, you would still develop a valuable understanding of the passage's main point and structure.


Last Thoughts?

This author takes issue with the environmentalists' evidence. Does this mean that the author thinks that the environmentalists' conclusion is false? That international debt doesn't reduce a nation's quality of life?

Nope. We have no idea whether international debt reduces a nation's quality of life. We only know that the environmentalists' haven't proven that claim. This idea is often tested on the Logical Reasoning section of the LSAT, too, so let’s dig into it.

Sometimes, this line of flawed reasoning is referred to as the "absence of evidence" flaw. Disproving someone's evidence doesn't disprove their conclusion. And that's because people sometimes support true conclusions with bad evidence. One could say, "We can conclude that a diet full of fruits and vegetables is healthy since I just ate a cheeseburger and I feel great." Obviously, that evidence is very bad (for many reasons). But I think we can still agree that the conclusion is true.

The same thing applies to this argument. Just because the author argues that environmentalists lack good evidence for their conclusion doesn't mean that the environmentalists' conclusion is automatically false. After all, perhaps researchers will eventually generate evidence that proves that international debt reduces a nation's quality of life. For this reason, we shouldn't select answer choices that say or imply that the environmentalists' conclusion is false or that international debt does not reduce a nation's quality of life.

Question prompt

The exports promotion hypothesis, Remaining source text redacted.
Why the credited answer is right

Credited answer: B

The notes below walk through why it fits the stem and how to eliminate the rest.

Strategy Overview

Refer to notes or what you highlighted/underline to locate where the passage discusses the exports promotion hypothesis, and refer to the relevant part of the passage as needed to find that answer choice that must be true

Answer Anticipation

For questions that ask us to find a specific detail mentioned in the passage, quickly finding and reviewing that piece of information is paramount. That is why we make brief notes describing the role of each paragraph and highlight or underline definitions and the minor Meta-Structures — doing so helps us find the salient information efficiently and reliably. Once we review that part of the passage, we can look through the answer choices to see which one is best supported by what we reviewed. Here, the question asks what the exports promotion hypothesis believes will happen when export goods rather than domestic goods are produced. Where did that come up in the passage? If we don't recall from the second question in this passage, we can consult our notes for the first paragraph. That note says the "'exports promotion hypothesis' holds that debt causes nations to harm their environments by producing many exports." So, one consequence of producing export goods is that the environment will be harmed. That seems a little obvious, so let's review the first paragraph to see if we can find any more specific consequences. In the first paragraph, the author paraphrases the environmentalists' argument about the exports promotion hypothesis. The author says that, "[p]artly because of the greater volume involved," shifting to production of many export goods "causes more environmental damage than does the production of goods for domestic consumption" (P1, S5). The author also explains that "a nation might raze its forests for timber or to open up land on which to plant cash crops" but says that this is only a "possible scenario frequently cited by environmentalists" (P1, S6). Since this is only a possible outcome, razing forests for timber or cash crops isn't a definite consequence of producing many export goods. However, producing a "greater volume" of goods and "causing more environmental damage" are definite consequences. Let's look for those in the answer choices.

Answer choices

  1. A
    international debt increases
    Why choice A is not credited

    Does this say the exports promotion hypothesis holds that when a nation shifts its production to focus on export goods, more goods and more environmental damage are produced?

    Nope, so let's eliminate (A). The export promotion hypothesis discusses what happens when nations shift their production strategy in response to high international debt. It doesn't say that focusing on export goods will increase international debt.

  2. B
    more goods are produced
    Why choice B matches the stem

    Does this say the exports promotion hypothesis holds that when a nation shifts its production to focus on export goods, more goods and more environmental damage are produced?

    Yes! The passage says that more goods are produced when a nation focuses its production on export goods. (This makes sense since there is always a bigger customer base outside one's country than within it.) So, this is supported by the passage, and we can select it and move on to the next question.

  3. C
    timber must be destroyed
    Why choice C is not credited

    Does this say the exports promotion hypothesis holds that when a nation shifts its production to focus on export goods, more goods and more environmental damage are produced?

    No, so we can eliminate this. Still, this is a popular answer choice among test-takers. Even though the first paragraph mentions timber in reference to the exports promotion hypothesis, there are still a few problems with this answer choice. First, as we discuss in the Answer Anticipation section, the author says that "a nation might raze its forests for timber or to open up land on which to plant cash crops" but that this is only a "possible scenario frequently cited by environmentalists" (P1, S6). So, it's not necessarily true that producing many export goods will result in razing forests for timber. Second, the author says that a nation may create timber by razing its forests. The author doesn't say that nations will destroy timber. A nation may destroy trees, but not its timber.

  4. D
    goods are produced more Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice D is not credited

    Does this say the exports promotion hypothesis holds that when a nation shifts its production to focus on export goods, more goods and more environmental damage are produced?

    Negative. We can cross off (D) for that reason. The author never says shifting a nation's focus to exporting goods will result in cheaper goods.

  5. E
    higher quality goods are Remaining source text redacted.
    Why choice E is not credited

    Does this say the exports promotion hypothesis holds that when a nation shifts its production to focus on export goods, more goods and more environmental damage are produced?

    No. So, we can eliminate (E).The passage never says or implies that shifting a nation's focus to exporting goods will result in higher-quality goods.

Question analytics

Based on historical answer selection rates for this question.

Answer choice distribution

  1. A 13%
  2. B Credited 51%
  3. C 24%
  4. D 9%
  5. E 3%

Deeper help

Ask follow-ups on any step

Optional AI tutor mode will let you interrogate assumptions, compare answers, and drill weak patterns without leaving the page.

Human-written explanations stay primary; AI is an add-on when you want it.

Discussion

No threads yet—be the first to ask a question or share an approach.