

Read carefully the passages given below and answer the questions.
Capital is made possible by saving. Only by forgoing present consumption can a society shift resources to the production of capital equipment. It is generally admitted that in any agricultural society, given the low per capita income, per capita saving is – in absolute terms
– very low. This circumstance is badly aggravated by the way saved resources are used. Temples, pyramids, mansions, jewelry, warfare, and so forth generally absorb a large quota of resources squeezed out of current income. Furthermore, pre-industrial societies are typically characterized by inadequate transport facilities. Mass transportation is generally non-existent and communications are costly and insecure. Consequently any pre-industrial society must keep inventories in much larger proportion to current production than any industrial society does. This is true for any type of commodity, but particularly so for basic necessities.
‘Keeping capital intact’ recurrently requires large quotas of saving to rebuild inventories depleted by frequent famines. Such inventories are a form of investment, i.e. of capital accumulation, but with a ‘stabilizing’ character. Generally investment of a ‘developmental’ character is very small in any agricultural society.
It has been indicated that a society needs different amounts of capital at different stages. In order to pass from, let us say, an agriculture type of economic organization to an industrial one, a society must make substantial efforts to build up the capital necessary for the transition. If this transition is gradual, the process can be relatively smooth. If, on the contrary, the transition is forced to take place in a very short time, the process is bound to be painful. In such case, ‘ industrial’ capital must be squeezed out from an income that is still
‘agricultural’. The more abrupt the transition, the greater the hardships.
To accomplish the transition, a given society must reach an absolute level of capital formation, the so-called ‘critical minimum level’, failing which the transition is not possible. But an agricultural society cannot industrialize by increasing beyond the ‘critical minimum’ the total volume of wooden ploughs or hoe-sticks produced, any more than hunters can become farmers by increasing their output of flaked stones and arrows. Indeed, the required changes in capital formation are of qualitative as well as of a quantitative nature. The qualitative changes imply that the active population must acquire new skills, and that the total population must adopt new patterns of living. Here we only have to remember that the need for new skills may mean that further capital is needed for investment in education.
In all agricultural society of our past we find that, mainly because of limitations of energy sources known and exploited, the great mass of people can hardly afford to satisfy anything but the more elementary needs, food, clothing, and housing, and even these at rather unsatisfactory levels. Correspondingly, most of the available resources are employed in agriculture, textile manufacture, and building.
Of these three sectors, agriculture is always by far the predominant one. It absorbs the greatest quota of available capital and labour. Further, it somehow represents the pivotal point around which all other activities tend to revolve. Building makes a large use of timber. And textile manufacture uses materials – wool or linen, cotton or silk – that are also produced ‘in the fields’.
On the fringe, there is always some trade – in one form or another – heavily concentrated on agricultural products (grains, wines, spices, timber, etc.) and textiles. In terms of labour employed, trade is generally a minor sector, and merchants a minority. But trade always plays a strategically dynamic role. It allows specialization and better use of available resources. Its fluctuations are of paramount importance to the fortunes of the whole economy. All historical records seem to demonstrate that where trade flourished, demographic and economic levels were the highest attainable within the range of agricultural possibilities. Actually, almost all the great agriculture civilizations of the pre-industrial past were founded on the expansion of the mercantile sector. And it was an exaggerated expansion of this sector in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century England that created the material preconditions for the emergence of the Industrial Revolution.
According to the author, Industrial Revolution in England was due to
1] significant rise in capital formation by the agricultural society.
2] an effort of the mercantile class that harnessed efforts of the agricultural class.
3] a class struggle between the producers (the agricultural society) and the consumers (the mercantile class)
4] an exponential increase in trading activity that lead to favourable conditions for the industrial revolution.
Explanation: Only (4) has been mentioned in the last part of the passage. Option 2 is incorrect as nowhere it is mentioned that the efforts of farmers are harnessed by traders.
Directions: In each of the questions given below, four different ways of writing a sentence are indicated. Choose the best way of writing the sentence.
(1) The advent of biotechnology and genetic engineering, the value of the genetic pool of a country has assumed enormous value and even a single gene of a variety is capable of changing the fate of the economy of a nation.
(2) The arrival of biotechnology and genetic engineering has assumed enormous value and even a single gene of a variety capable of changing the fate of the economy of a nation and the value of the genetic pool of a country.
(3) With the advent of biotechnology and genetic engineering, the genetic pool of a country has assumed enormous value and even a single gene of a variety is capable of changing the fate of the economy of a nation
(4) Even a single gene of a variety is capable of changing the fate of the economy of a nation, with the advent of biotechnology and genetic engineering and the genetic pool of a country has assumed enormous value.
Explanation: The advent of and the value of are the to nouns in subject, hence it is plural. So, has the singular verb is wrong in choice (1). Choice (2) is meaningful, but the second part has no verb. So, it is in complete. Choice (3) connects the action, the result of the action and the further effect of the action in correct order. Choice (4) has clumsy structure, i.e., the second and the third parts are not related properly.
Directions: In each of the questions given below, four different ways of writing a sentence are indicated. Choose the best way of writing the sentence.
(1) The ten days strike by the truckers lasted bringing the supply of commodities of all sorts to a standstill and causing widespread inconvenience to the people in general.
(2) Bringing the supply of commodities of all sorts to a standstill and causing widespread inconvenience to the people in general is caused by the strike of the truckers union, which lasted for ten days.
(3) The supply of commodities of all sorts are brought to a standstill causing widespread inconvenience to the people in general due to the strike by the truckers union which lasted for ten days.
(4) The strike by the truckers union lasted for ten days, bringing the supply of commodities of all sorts to a standstill and causing widespread inconvenience to the people in general.
Explanation: ‘Lasted’ should be followed by time. So, choice (1) is wrong. ‘Is caused’ in choice (2) is wrong. (‘Is the result of’ in the correct phrase.) ‘Due to’ in choice (3) is wrong. (Because of is correct.). Choice (4), which states the action and the result of the action meaningfully is correct.
Directions: In each of the questions given below, four different ways of writing a sentence are indicated. Choose the best way of writing the sentence.
(1) The SEBI committee has suggested that the companies should be rated based on the parameters of generating wealth, maintenance and sharing as well as on corporate governance.
(2) The SEBI committee has suggested that the companies should be rated based on the parameters of wealth generation, maintenance and sharing as well as on corporate governance.
(3) The SEBI committee has suggested that the companies based on the parameters of wealth generation, maintenance and sharing as well as on corporate governance should be rated.
(4) The SEBI committee has suggested that the rate of the companies should be based on the parameters of wealth generation, maintenance and sharing as well as on corporate governance.
Explanation: Generating wealth is choice (1) is wrong. It should be wealth– generation. Choice (2) is correct. Companies are not based on parameters. So, sentence 3 is wrong. Rate of the companies is in appropriate.
Directions: In each of the questions given below, four different ways of writing a sentence are indicated. Choose the best way of writing the sentence.
Explanation: Statement 'A' is wrong because, developmental (means incidental to growth, evolutionary) "developmental successes" is not appropriate.
Again the usage of "economical" is erroneous because economical means – (sparing in the use of resources or money) which is not appropriate to the context.
Hence statement 'A' is wrong. In statement 'B' the ordering of words, 'to the extent that they were considered at all in recent years" is inappropriate. According to the context in the sentence the western economic ideas were not considered to a great extent i.e., it should be placed after "western economic ideas", not before it.
Statement 'D' is also erroneous due to the wrong structure.