180bound wrote:I’m having trouble understand the wording in this question. The conclusion states that the law would remove the incentive. But to me removing the incentive to something doesn’t at all guarantee an outcome. I’m a teacher to second graders and I remove incentives for behavior all the time but never does that mean the kids I work with will automatically behavior differently because of such. The same goes with adults to me.
Thanks!
I also had the same thought, and realized after that this is exactly the assumption required by the stimulus.
The economist says that the law would remove one incentive, which will in turn protect employees. Basically the economist is
assuming that if
this specific incentive is removed, some CEOs would
actually change their behavior.
So that brings us to E), which says:
If the law is enacted (i.e. this incentive erased )
at least some CEOs will change their ways
Basically without this assumption, the conclusion doesn't hold and nothing would change, as you say. Seems idealistic and clearly the skeptic was repelled by the right answer choice, but it's one economist's opinion.