Question:medium

Passage: 

Many economists argue that economic growth alone cannot guarantee well-being. While GDP may rise, factors like inequality, environmental degradation, and social alienation can worsen simultaneously. Thus, policy focus must move toward holistic indicators that measure quality of life rather than simply economic output. 

Question: 

Which of the following can be inferred from the passage?

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For inference questions, avoid extreme or speculative conclusions. Choose the option that must be true based on the passage's reasoning, not merely one that sounds related.
Updated On: Jul 4, 2026
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Solution and Explanation

Reduce the passage to a single if-then: if growth can happen while people's real conditions get worse, growth by itself tells you nothing final about whether things are actually getting better. That is the one thing this short passage locks in, no more and no less. It does not say growth should stop, since the author only wants better measurement, not less economic activity. It does not say inequality always rises with GDP, since the passage only claims it "can" worsen alongside growth, not that it must. And it says nothing about how easy or hard quality-of-life indicators are to use. The only claim the passage cannot be read without accepting is that judging progress needs more than the GDP number.
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