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Sajjad1994
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samagra21
Sajjad1994, why is A correct for Q1 ? Inverse Causal Relation?

Sweetiag
why A is correct option in ques 1

Explanation

1. According to this passage, which term below describes the argument that industrialization will accelerate the growth of wealth?

Difficulty Level: 700

Explanation

The passage criticizes the belief that industrialization will automatically lead to an increase in wealth as illogical. It argues that this belief is based on a fallacy and confusion of an intermediate effect with a cause. The passage suggests that the argument for the direct relationship between industrialization and wealth growth is flawed, hence describing it as "illogical."

Answer: A
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Could someone explain question 4? Sajjad1994
Also what in the world does this mean: However strong a case there may exist in such countries for the government's taking the initiative in providing examples and spending freely on spreading knowledge and education, it seems to me that the case against over-all planning and direction of all economic activity is even stronger there than in more advanced countries. "All economic activity" spooked me a bit. Do they mean arguing for a case against over-all planning and direction of all economic activity towards industrialization? Cause then that makes sense. Otherwise, it just feels like a goofy sentence.
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Explanation

4. The major objective of this passage is:

Explanation

The passage discusses the paradoxical approaches of "old countries" (likely developed) and "new countries" (likely developing) regarding their agricultural and industrial populations. It criticizes the naive fallacy that industrialization alone causes wealth growth, emphasizing that it is an intermediate effect rather than a cause. The author argues that increasing average income requires an agricultural surplus to feed the industrial population.

The author questions the rush to industrialize in developing countries, noting that it is not necessarily the fastest way to increase wealth without an agricultural base. It suggests that limited capital should be spread widely to directly increase food production rather than invested in capital-intensive industrial plants. It advocates for free development rather than imposing patterns from advanced countries (which have different capital-labor ratios). It acknowledges a role for government in providing examples and spreading knowledge/education but strongly argues against overall planning and direction of all economic activity.

A. While productivity is mentioned, it is not the central argument; the focus is on how to allocate resources.

B. There is a comparison, but it is used to critique the imitation of advanced countries, not the main objective.

C. This is directly supported, especially in the last paragraph: "the case against over-all planning and direction of all economic activity is even stronger there than in more advanced countries."

D. The proportion is discussed, but the author is not advocating active management; rather, they argue against forced patterns.

E. The author actually disputes this direct link, calling it a confusion of effect and cause.

Answer: C
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Sajjad1994 Sir in Q2 shouldn't it be A instead of C. C looks enticing but, para in my opinion talk about invest in industrial equipments and try to spread the wealth among people as much as possible which will boost the demand for food eventually
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madhavbajaj9
Sajjad1994 Sir in Q2 shouldn't it be A instead of C. C looks enticing but, para in my opinion talk about invest in industrial equipments and try to spread the wealth among people as much as possible which will boost the demand for food eventually

Explanation

2. What does the author of this passage recommend in order to produce a rapid rise in standard of living in India and China?

Explanation

The author recommends that in order to produce a rapid rise in the standard of living in India and China, capital should be directed primarily towards increasing the production of food, rather than towards large-scale industrialization or capital-intensive plants. This is evident from the statement: "only a small portion of such capital as becomes available should be devoted to the creation of elaborate industrial equipment and perhaps none of it to the kind of highly automatized, 'capital-intensive' plants... and that these countries should aim at spreading such capital as widely and thinly as possible among those uses that will directly increase the production of food."

Answer: C
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