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ShishirKr
In question number 5, why option C has been eliminated ?

Railroads are an example of an industry with increasing returns to scale, i.e. the pin factory idea. The example shows that economists were aware that increasing returns existed. They just didn’t pay much attention to increasing returns because they couldn’t model them.

(C) is wrong because railroads are just an example of increasing returns. The passage doesn’t say that such industries are becoming more common.
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ShishirKr
In question number 5, why option C has been eliminated ?

Railroads are an example of an industry with increasing returns to scale, i.e. the pin factory idea. The example shows that economists were aware that increasing returns existed. They just didn’t pay much attention to increasing returns because they couldn’t model them.

(C) is wrong because railroads are just an example of increasing returns. The passage doesn’t say that such industries are becoming more common.


Sajjad1994 Can you please explain how D is correct? I don’t understand how it is related to invisible hand. Thanks.
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Sajjad1994
ShishirKr
In question number 5, why option C has been eliminated ?

Sajjad1994 Can you please explain how D is correct? I don’t understand how it is related to invisible hand. Thanks.

(C) is wrong because railroads are just an example of increasing returns. The passage doesn’t say that such industries are becoming more common.

Explanation

5. The reference to railroads (Highlighted) serves to

Difficulty Level: 700+

Explanation

Railroads are an example of an industry with increasing returns to scale, i.e. the pin factory idea. The example shows that economists were aware that increasing returns existed. They just didn’t pay much attention to increasing returns because they couldn’t model them.

(A) There’s no ambiguity in the invisible hand. It’s perfectly clear. And, railroads referred to the pin factory idea, not the invisible hand.

(B) We have no idea why the pin factory was hard to model.

(C) Railroads are just an example of increasing returns. The passage doesn’t say that such industries are becoming more common.

(D) CORRECT. Yes. The pin factory model is a better description of railroads. They don’t follow the invisible hand model, because railroads tend towards monopoly.

(E) Increasing returns often lead to monopoly, not competition. See lines 25-26 (But increasing returns create a natural tendency toward monopoly)

Answer: D
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Can you please explain 8?
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Can you please explain 8?

Explanation

8. Which one of the following, if true, would most undermine the connection that the author draws between increased size and monopoly power?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

The author states that increasing size tends toward monopoly because the larger company can have lower costs than a smaller company. The credited response will provide a reason that increased size may not be able to gain monopoly power.

A. No. This does not weaken the claim that larger size would lead to monopoly by allowing the larger companies to cut costs.

B. No. A lower salary for narrowly specialized workers would strengthen the claim that increased size would allow a company to cut costs.

C. No. Collusion is not relevant to the discussion of whether increased size tends to monopoly.

D. No. A varied size requirement across industries would not weaken the claim that increased size allows a certain company tocut costs more than another company in the same industry.

E. Yes. If the monetary gains of increased size are offset by training or other costs, such an increase in size would not allow a company to cut costs and gain monopoly power.

Answer: E
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Sajjad1994 can you share explanation for question 1?
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Can somebody explain question 3? Sajjad1994
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Sajjad1994 can you share explanation for question 1?

Explanation

1. Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

The Bottom Line of the passage contains the main point. The credited response should state that the passage promotes the ideas of David Warsh who points out how an important contradiction in economic theory has made it difficult for the idea of increasing returns to become part of mainstream economic thought until the late 1970s.

A. No. This choice contradicts the fourth paragraph, which states that diminishing returns dominated economic theory for almost two centuries.

B. No. The passage deals primarily with the concept of increasing returns as described by the Pin Factory example.

C. No. The passage does not compare the rigor of the mathematical models for the Invisible Hand and the Pin Factory.

D. No. The passage deals primarily with the concept of increasing returns as described by the Pin Factory example.

E. Yes. This matches the bottom line.

Answer: E
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Can somebody explain question 3? Sajjad1994

Explanation

3. The main purpose of the fourth paragraph is to

Difficulty Level: 600

Explanation

The question asks for the purpose of the fourth paragraph. The bottom line states that the fourth paragraph argues that the difficulty of explaining the Pin Factory with math caused its de-emphasis in the field of economics.

A. No. There is no theory that purports to solve the tensions between the Invisible Hand and the Pin Factory.

B. Yes. The inability of math to model the Pin Factory led to its deemphasis in the field of economics.

C. No. The paragraph discusses challenges and does not offer support for the Pin Factory.

D. No. The paragraph mentions the modeling of only one economic idea.

E. No. The fourth paragraph states a reason that an idea has not made it to the mainstream but does not offer a refutation for that reason in this paragraph.

Answer: B
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­5. The reference to railroads (Highlighted) serves to

(A) resolve an ambiguity inherent in the metaphor of the Invisible Hand - There is no ambiguity. Out of scope. 

(B) illustrate the difficulty of stating the concept of the Pin Factory with mathematical rigor - This is not an example of the difficulty of stating the concept. 

(C) call attention to the increasing prevalence of industries that have characteristics of the Pin Factory - "increasing" is a distortion. 

(D) point to an industry that illustrates the shortcomings of economists’ emphasis on the Invisible Hand - Yes. Economists’ emphasis on the Invisible Hand has focussed mainly on diminishing returns. However, "railroads" highlight an industry where the economic theory of diminishing returns fails to fit, thus making a case for increasing returns. 

(E) present an example of the high levels of competition achieved in transportation industries - out of scope. 
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can someone explain q.6?
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Can someone explain why in question 2, opt B is eliminated?
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Can someone explain why in question 2, opt B is eliminated?
­Anchal02


Let me take a shot at this. I got this incorrect as well when I was attempting the question, but during the review, I found how B can be eliminated.
Throughout the passage, the author regards both the Pin Factory and the Invisible Hand models with equal respect. The author himself never takes a side.
Now let's look at the last paragraph:
Quote:
...By then, economists had finally found ways to describe the Pin Factory with the rigor needed to make it respectable.
This tells us at the very least that the author is not unhappy with the fact economic could finally describe Pin factory with the needed rigour. In fact, we can even say that he was accepting of the idea. The key words here that make this more clear, although still somewhat subtle in my opinion are "finally" and "respectable" in the last paragraph that I quoted above.

Because the author was more accepting of the idea of a Pin factory, as implied in the last paragraph, we can say he was receptive to it. "Receptivity" is the only word in the answer choices that comes close to telling us that he was "accepting" of the idea of a Pin factory being adopted into mainstream economics.

"Uncertainty" would accurately describe how the mainstream economists felt towards Pin Factory. The entire third paragraph talks about this. But nowhere in this paragraph, we can say that the Author shares the same view.

I hope that helps, please let me know if you need further clarification.­
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can someone explain q.6?
­Hi JeenaTreesaJames

Question No.6 asks for illustration of lines " The pin factory’s employees, by specializing on narrow tasks, produce far more than they could if each worked independently." in the second passage

(A) A publishing house is able to greatly improve the productivity of its editors by relaxing the standards to which those editors must adhere. This allows the publishing house to employ many fewer editors - result needs to address productivity enhancement

(B) A large bee colony is able to use some bees solely to guard its nectar sources (specialization). This enables the colony to collect more nectar, which can feed a larger colony that can better divide up the work of processing the nectar.

(C) A school district increases the total number of students that can be accommodated in a single building by switching to year-round operation, with a different quarter of its student body on vacation at any given time. - Its a trade off situation, you are increasing your scale by forgoing year round productivity

(D) The lobster industry as a whole is able to catch substantially more lobsters a day with the same number of traps because advances in technology make the doors to the traps easier for lobsters to get through - The lines in the passage talks about employees contribution, cannot eliminate totally, but option B will be the priority over this option

(E) A large ant colony divides and produces two competing colonies (not analogous to the lines in passage, but can be compared against B) that each eventually grow large and prosperous enough to divide into more colonies. These colonies together contain more ants than could have existed in one colony. - This choice talks about productivity but misses out on points like specializing on narrow tasks & economies of scale in the colony itself

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Sajjad1994


Railroads are an example of an industry with increasing returns to scale, i.e. the pin factory idea. The example shows that economists were aware that increasing returns existed. They just didn’t pay much attention to increasing returns because they couldn’t model them.

(C) is wrong because railroads are just an example of increasing returns. The passage doesn’t say that such industries are becoming more common.
"obviously characterized many enterprises, such as railroads." Isn't this referring to the fact that many industries with increasing return to scale model existed and one of the many is railroads?
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Yes, you're 100% correct about what that sentence means. But watch what C does:

What the passage says:
"Many enterprises had increasing returns, such as railroads"
= Many industries had this feature. Railroads is one example.

What C claims:
"increasing prevalence of industries"
"Increasing prevalence" = becoming MORE common, growing in number over time

Simple parallel:
I say: "Many animals are endangered, such as tigers."
This means: Many animals ARE endangered. Tigers is one example.
If an answer says: "to highlight the INCREASING number of endangered animals"
That's WRONG. I said many animals ARE endangered, not that endangered animals are GROWING in number.

Same problem here:
Passage says: Many industries HAD increasing returns
C says: Industries with increasing returns were becoming MORE prevalent
The passage never says these industries were growing or becoming more common. It just says they existed.

C adds "increasing" (= growing over time) which isn't in the passage.

gotitright

"obviously characterized many enterprises, such as railroads." Isn't this referring to the fact that many industries with increasing return to scale model existed and one of the many is railroads?
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