- Wed May 17, 2017 6:03 pm
#34992
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This question tests your understanding of a key concept in this passage—that of increasing returns
to scale. Approach it like you would any Must Be True/Principle question: use the principle of
increasing returns to scale, as you understand it from the second paragraph of the passage, and apply
it to the situation in each answer choice. Essentially, your job is to find an enterprise similar to Adam
Smith’s pin factory: larger size allows for greater specialization of labor, which increases efficiency
and ultimately leads to greater returns.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because large-scale enterprises do not
necessarily have relaxed employee standards.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it properly describes a positive “feedback
loop” between labor specialization and growth: the larger the bee colony, the better the bees can
divide up the work of processing the nectar. This, in turn, enables the colony to collect even more
nectar (and increase in size). Similarly, a larger pin factory enables each worker to specialize on a
narrower set of tasks, which in turn guarantees greater returns and huge increases in efficiency.
Answer choice (C): Here, a school district is able to increase the size of its student body by
extending its operations year-round. The pin factory, by contrast, achieves growth through more
efficient and specialized labor, not by prolonging the work-day of its employees.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice describes an industry whose growth results primarily from
advances in technology. The concept of increasing returns to scale is indifferent to such advances:
in the pin factory, growth enables—and is enabled by—greater specialization of labor, not more
advanced machinery.
Answer choice (E): Hopefully you were able to eliminate this answer choice relatively quickly, as it
describes the concept of diminishing returns: the divided colonies together contain more ants than
could have existed in one colony.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14161)
The correct answer choice is (B)
This question tests your understanding of a key concept in this passage—that of increasing returns
to scale. Approach it like you would any Must Be True/Principle question: use the principle of
increasing returns to scale, as you understand it from the second paragraph of the passage, and apply
it to the situation in each answer choice. Essentially, your job is to find an enterprise similar to Adam
Smith’s pin factory: larger size allows for greater specialization of labor, which increases efficiency
and ultimately leads to greater returns.
Answer choice (A): This answer choice is incorrect, because large-scale enterprises do not
necessarily have relaxed employee standards.
Answer choice (B): This is the correct answer choice, as it properly describes a positive “feedback
loop” between labor specialization and growth: the larger the bee colony, the better the bees can
divide up the work of processing the nectar. This, in turn, enables the colony to collect even more
nectar (and increase in size). Similarly, a larger pin factory enables each worker to specialize on a
narrower set of tasks, which in turn guarantees greater returns and huge increases in efficiency.
Answer choice (C): Here, a school district is able to increase the size of its student body by
extending its operations year-round. The pin factory, by contrast, achieves growth through more
efficient and specialized labor, not by prolonging the work-day of its employees.
Answer choice (D): This answer choice describes an industry whose growth results primarily from
advances in technology. The concept of increasing returns to scale is indifferent to such advances:
in the pin factory, growth enables—and is enabled by—greater specialization of labor, not more
advanced machinery.
Answer choice (E): Hopefully you were able to eliminate this answer choice relatively quickly, as it
describes the concept of diminishing returns: the divided colonies together contain more ants than
could have existed in one colony.