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ExamsIBPS POEnglish

Directions (84-87): Read the following passage and answer the following questions based on the given passage. For years, the government of Bhutan has enshrined gross national happiness as its guiding light. Though national leaders had long eschewed traditional economic metrics like gross domestic product in favor of a more subjective understanding of development, in 2008, the country’s constitution formally established that ensuring a “good quality of life for the people of Bhutan” would be its primary aim. GNH would be the measure of the country’s progress, quantified by a complicated index based on areas of psychological well-being, cultural diversity and resilience, education, health, time use, good governance, community vitality, ecological diversity and resilience, and economic living standards—an array of factors that might together quantify well-being and happiness. Sperling said economists and policy makers too often set their sights on certain goals—high GDP and low unemployment—that can disregard how Americans actually feel. To re-center economics in people’s lived experiences, Sperling proposed the adoption of a different goal: dignity. Economic dignity would mean being able “to care for your family and enjoy the most meaningful moments of family life, without economic deprivation taking away those most meaningful moments,” Sperling said. By Sperling’s criteria, he said, America is failing on all three fronts. Even as the unemployment rate in the United States is hovering near a 50-year low, the country has no universal paid-family-leave requirement to ensure that new parents have time to spend with their infant children or to heal after birth. No law grants employees bereavement leave with which to mourn loved ones and begin to piece their lives back together in their absence. The federal minimum wage falls beneath the poverty line for families of two or more. Officially, about 13 million Americans—and likely more unofficially—have to work multiple jobs to make ends meet. The U.S. also fails to provide adequate support for people who have lost their jobs, and adequate resources with which to find new ones. Students are taking on crippling debt to go to college. In 2017, 12.3 percent of Americans were living in poverty. Together, Sperling observed, that adds up to millions of Americans living without what he defines as economic dignity: unable to provide a basic quality of life for themselves and the people they love, enduring unfulfilling or downright exploitative work out of a desperate need for money. And with the nation’s economic mobility in sharp decline over the past few decades, many workers and their families could remain mired in that state for generations. But Americans can fight for greater economic dignity, Sperling said, arguing that many already are: by unionizing; pushing for a higher minimum wage;

  1. What is the main idea of the passage?
  2. What is the tone of the passage?
  3. What is the purpose of the passage?
  4. What is the title of the passage?

Correct answer: What is the main idea of the passage?

Solution

The passage contrasts Bhutan’s gross national happiness with Sperling’s idea of economic dignity and argues that traditional metrics like GDP may ignore real human well-being. It discusses why dignity should be considered a key economic goal. Therefore, the main idea is the best fit.

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