Cause & Effect — Identify the Relationship:\nI. The refugee crisis split opinion within the European Union: some members refused refugees, others proposed a shared quota.\nII. The Euro nearly lost its status as the common currency in the European Union.\nWhich option best captures the causal link between I and II?

Difficulty: Medium

Correct Answer: If both statements I and II are effects of independent causes

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Two major EU challenges are mentioned: a refugee-policy schism and threats to the Euro’s integrity. The task is to test whether one caused the other.


Given Data / Assumptions:

  • I: Political division over refugee intake and burden sharing.
  • II: Monetary integration stress severe enough to endanger the Euro’s common-currency status.
  • These typically stem from different domains: migration policy vs. fiscal/monetary stability.


Concept / Approach:
While both stress the EU, the Euro’s crisis largely arises from macroeconomic/fiscal issues, not directly from refugee policy. Thus, both are better seen as effects of separate, complex causes rather than one causing the other.


Step-by-Step Solution:

1) Map domains: (I) immigration politics; (II) monetary/fiscal architecture.2) Identify distinct drivers: geopolitics vs. sovereign debt/monetary union design.3) Conclude both are effects of different causes.


Verification / Alternative check:
Even if refugee inflows have fiscal implications, the Euro’s near-failure predates or proceeds via financial channels; a direct causal claim is too strong for the stem.


Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Asserting I→II or II→I overstates linkage; independence as “causes” (c) misreads them as initiating factors rather than outcomes of broader drivers.


Common Pitfalls:
Conflating co-occurring EU crises with direct causation.


Final Answer:
Option D: Both are effects of independent causes.

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