- Tue May 03, 2016 9:53 am
#23830
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox-X. The correct answer choice is (D)
Historically, prolonged periods of famine are followed by periods of rising wages because workers are more scarce and therefore more valuable. For some reason, the Irish potato famine of the 1840s was an exception: the workforce was cut in half and yet the average wages did not rise.
The four incorrect answers to a ResolveX question will actively resolve the paradox, that is, they will allow both sides to be factually correct and will either explain how the situation came into being or add a piece of information that shows how the two ideas or occurrences can coexist. Any answer choice that explains why the average wages did not rise in Ireland following the Irish potato famine of the 1840s will therefore be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): If improved medical care quickly reduced the mortality rate to below prefamine levels, it is reasonable to expect that the Irish population grew rapidly in the decade following the famine and that the shortage of workers was successfully averted. Because this answer choice explains the paradox, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): If the majority of those who left Ireland were the elderly and the infirm, the number of able-bodied workers need not have diminished enough to cause a shortage of workers. Because this answer choice explains why the average wage in Ireland did not increase, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): If the diminished supply of labor was counterbalanced by a diminished demand for it, it is not surprizing that workers were unable to secure higher average wages. In a competitive labor market, the cost of labor will always equalize the quantity demanded by manufacturers and the quantity supplied by the labor force, resulting in an economic equilibrium. If both supply and demand are lower than before, it is reasonable to expect that the cost of labor will remain the same.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Even though the birth rate increased during the decade following the famine and thus compensated for much of the loss of population, such an increase can have no immediate effect on the labor force, which is comprised of adults. Because this answer choice does not explain why Ireland was an exception, it is correct.
Answer choice (E): If England legislated artificially low wages, no wonder the average wages in Ireland did not rise following the labor shortages of 1840s. This answer choice explains the Irish paradox and is therefore incorrect.
Resolve the Paradox-X. The correct answer choice is (D)
Historically, prolonged periods of famine are followed by periods of rising wages because workers are more scarce and therefore more valuable. For some reason, the Irish potato famine of the 1840s was an exception: the workforce was cut in half and yet the average wages did not rise.
The four incorrect answers to a ResolveX question will actively resolve the paradox, that is, they will allow both sides to be factually correct and will either explain how the situation came into being or add a piece of information that shows how the two ideas or occurrences can coexist. Any answer choice that explains why the average wages did not rise in Ireland following the Irish potato famine of the 1840s will therefore be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): If improved medical care quickly reduced the mortality rate to below prefamine levels, it is reasonable to expect that the Irish population grew rapidly in the decade following the famine and that the shortage of workers was successfully averted. Because this answer choice explains the paradox, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (B): If the majority of those who left Ireland were the elderly and the infirm, the number of able-bodied workers need not have diminished enough to cause a shortage of workers. Because this answer choice explains why the average wage in Ireland did not increase, it is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): If the diminished supply of labor was counterbalanced by a diminished demand for it, it is not surprizing that workers were unable to secure higher average wages. In a competitive labor market, the cost of labor will always equalize the quantity demanded by manufacturers and the quantity supplied by the labor force, resulting in an economic equilibrium. If both supply and demand are lower than before, it is reasonable to expect that the cost of labor will remain the same.
Answer choice (D): This is the correct answer choice. Even though the birth rate increased during the decade following the famine and thus compensated for much of the loss of population, such an increase can have no immediate effect on the labor force, which is comprised of adults. Because this answer choice does not explain why Ireland was an exception, it is correct.
Answer choice (E): If England legislated artificially low wages, no wonder the average wages in Ireland did not rise following the labor shortages of 1840s. This answer choice explains the Irish paradox and is therefore incorrect.