GRE Reading Comprehension

Home > GRE Test > GRE Reading Comprehension Questions

Next steps

Source: PP2

According to the conventional view, serfdom in nineteenth-century Russia inhibited economic growth. In this view Russian peasants'status as serfs kept them poor through burdensome taxes in cash, in labor, and in kind; through restrictions on mobility, and through various forms of coercion. Melton, however, argues that serfdom was perfectly compatible with economic growth, because many Russian serfs were able to get around landlord'rules and regulations. If serfs could pay for passports, they were usually granted permission to leave the estate. If they could pay the fine, they could establish a separate household; and if they had the resources, they could hire laborers to cultivate the communal lands, while they themselves engaged in trade or worked as migrant laborers in cities.

Question List: 1 2

It can be inferred from the passage that the "rules and regulations" affecting serfdom in Russia involved

  • A responsibility for the work needed to accomplish certain defined tasks
  • B restrictions on freedom of movement
  • C limitations on the ability to set up an independent household.

Show Answer

Previous       Next