Library/PT 128/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

In many Western countries, bankruptcy laws have shifted from punishing people and companies to helping them and, in many cases, helping their creditors too. People worry about more bankruptcies, but making relief harder would likely stop struggling businesses and workers from continuing and would harm the economy. Long ago debtors could be jailed and companies closed, which often left creditors worse off and caused job losses. Today courts usually reorganize debts, give some relief, and transfer assets so firms can keep operating and people can keep earning; bankruptcies still leave public records and hurt credit records, but the main goal is to restore economic health and give creditors a better chance to be repaid.

Logic Breakdown

Look for an answer that would directly undercut the passage's central claim that punitive measures (imprisonment or dissolution) harm the public good and provide little benefit to creditors. The correct choice will supply comparative evidence that punishment yields better economic outcomes for society or creditors.

Passage Stimulus

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13.

Which one of the following, if true, would most weaken the author's argument against harsh punishment for debtors?

Correct Answer
E
E is correct because it directly contradicts the author's central empirical claims that punitive treatment of debtors harms the public good and provides little benefit to creditors. Relevant passage sentences: "However, any measure seeking to make bankruptcy protection less available would run the risk of preventing continued economic activity of financially troubled individuals and institutions." "But creditors derive little benefit from imprisoned debtors unable to repay even a portion of their debt." "And if the entity to be punished is a large enterprise, for example, an auto manufacturer, its dissolution would cause significant unemployment and the disruption of much-needed services." and the view that "the public good is better served by allowing debt-heavy corporations to continue to operate, and indebted individuals to continue to earn wages, than by disabling insolvent economic entities." If E is true, it gives broad comparative evidence that imprisoning debtors is associated with greater economic health than abandoning imprisonment, directly undermining the author's argument that harsh punishment should be resisted because it damages the public good and fails to serve creditors.
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