Productivity refers to the

a. major earnings from trade in any given year depending on factors such as weather, strikes, and international market prices.
b. infrastructure needed for an educated and healthy population, such as schools, universities, hospitals, and clinics.
c. output of goods and services in relation to the number of work hours needed to produce them.
d. elite in dual economies who keep the country functioning since they are the professionals who lead the government and economy.
e. development strategy that emphasizes private foreign investment in new machine-based technologies.

C

Political Science

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Some argue that impoverished nations can’t afford to grant “luxury goods” rights and must start with economic rights. The author argues against this saying there is a false trade off. Select the best answer that refutes the author’s argument:

a. Global economic regimes may put poor countries in a position where they literally cannot afford “luxury goods” rights. b. “Luxury goods” rights such as freedom of speech literally cost more money than an active censorship protocol. c. There are no “luxury goods” rights because any right protected by a governmental regime is either cheap or free. d. Access to the global political economy encourages lesser developed nations to provide “luxury rights” to citizens.

Political Science

Consumer-outcome criteria refers to:

a. Measurable client-based services. b. The effectiveness of a policy in ameliorating social problems. c. The profit gained by providing resources. d. An agency’s performance in a social setting.

Political Science