Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Many people blame corporations for social problems because companies focus on making money even if it harms the public. Economists respond that corporations aren’t people and CEOs must act for owners’ profits, which they say usually ends up helping society. The author disagrees: chasing profit doesn’t always help and can clearly harm the public (for example, a paper mill could cut down a forest or pollute a lake to boost profits), and CEOs still have a personal moral duty to refuse profitable actions that damage the public even if owners punish them.
Logic Breakdown
Identify the function of the paper-mill example in the last paragraph: determine whether it serves as a counterexample to the economists' claim that profit-maximization necessarily benefits the public.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.The discussion of the paper mill in the third sentence of the last paragraph is intended primarily to
Correct Answer
B
The paper-mill sentence is a concrete counterexample showing that maximizing profits can produce public harm, directly undermining the economists' claim. Support from passage: '...there is no guarantee—either theoretically or in practice—that a given CEO will benefit the public by maximizing corporate profit.' and 'It is absurd to deny the possibility, say, of a paper mill legally maximizing its profits over a five-year period by decimating a forest for its wood or polluting a lake with its industrial waste.'
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