- Sun Feb 21, 2016 12:00 am
#32469
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox—#%. The correct answer choice is (C)
The Paradox in this question is fact-intensive, but not otherwise difficult to understand. An Australian family of sheep farmers saw their income earned from wool sales increase dramatically between 1840 and 1860. The family sold the wool on the international market, where the price for wool was higher than the price paid on the domestic markets. During this period, both the percentage and the amount of wool the family sold on the international market increased dramatically.
However, despite this increase in the family’s income generated by selling wool, the family did not enjoy a commensurate increase in prosperity. The question stem asks us to select the answer choice that most helps to resolve this apparent contradiction. Our prephrase is that the correct answer will tell us that something reduced the family’s income in some other area, or that the purchasing power of their income was deflated in some way.
Answer choice (A): There are two keys to this answer choice. The most important is the restriction of the fact to the end of the 1800s, a time period irrelevant to the paradox, which dealt with events between 1840 and 1860. Next is the focus on the domestic wool market. The reason the family’s income from wool sales increased so dramatically was that they increased the percentage and amount of the wool they sold on the international market. We do not know whether the domestic market prices increased at all, and we have no basis to assess the impact of the comparatively greater increase in prices in Australia generally.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice focuses on the domestic wool market, which is irrelevant to the paradox.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If all sheep farmers produced these other products, then the family at issue in the stimulus did as well. If the prices, both international and domestic, for a whole swath of other products produced by the family decreased sharply during the same period, that drop would help explain why the increase in their profits from wool did not translate into financial prosperity commensurate to the increase.
Answer choice (D): This answer tries to change the facts in order to avoid the paradox. While it may be the case generally that Australian wool producers were in a less favorable position, the stimulus is clear that this particular family enjoyed a substantial increase in income earned from wool.
Answer choice (E): The implication of this answer choice may be that the family discussed in the stimulus faced increased competition. However, the family at issue saw their income from wool sales increase substantially, so this information does not help us to resolve the paradox.
Resolve the Paradox—#%. The correct answer choice is (C)
The Paradox in this question is fact-intensive, but not otherwise difficult to understand. An Australian family of sheep farmers saw their income earned from wool sales increase dramatically between 1840 and 1860. The family sold the wool on the international market, where the price for wool was higher than the price paid on the domestic markets. During this period, both the percentage and the amount of wool the family sold on the international market increased dramatically.
However, despite this increase in the family’s income generated by selling wool, the family did not enjoy a commensurate increase in prosperity. The question stem asks us to select the answer choice that most helps to resolve this apparent contradiction. Our prephrase is that the correct answer will tell us that something reduced the family’s income in some other area, or that the purchasing power of their income was deflated in some way.
Answer choice (A): There are two keys to this answer choice. The most important is the restriction of the fact to the end of the 1800s, a time period irrelevant to the paradox, which dealt with events between 1840 and 1860. Next is the focus on the domestic wool market. The reason the family’s income from wool sales increased so dramatically was that they increased the percentage and amount of the wool they sold on the international market. We do not know whether the domestic market prices increased at all, and we have no basis to assess the impact of the comparatively greater increase in prices in Australia generally.
Answer choice (B): This answer choice focuses on the domestic wool market, which is irrelevant to the paradox.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. If all sheep farmers produced these other products, then the family at issue in the stimulus did as well. If the prices, both international and domestic, for a whole swath of other products produced by the family decreased sharply during the same period, that drop would help explain why the increase in their profits from wool did not translate into financial prosperity commensurate to the increase.
Answer choice (D): This answer tries to change the facts in order to avoid the paradox. While it may be the case generally that Australian wool producers were in a less favorable position, the stimulus is clear that this particular family enjoyed a substantial increase in income earned from wool.
Answer choice (E): The implication of this answer choice may be that the family discussed in the stimulus faced increased competition. However, the family at issue saw their income from wool sales increase substantially, so this information does not help us to resolve the paradox.