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 the passage's primary claim: modern bankruptcy law has shifted away from punishment toward remedies that preserve economic activity and serve the public good, and the passage argues that this shift should be preserved. Supporting sentences: "Modern bankruptcy laws, in serving the needs of an interdependent society, serve the varied interests of the greatest number of citizens." and "any measure seeking to make bankruptcy protection less available would run the risk of preventing continued economic activity of financially troubled individuals and institutions. It is for this reason that the temptation to return to a focus on punishment of individuals or corporations that become insolvent must be resisted."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage6.Which one of the following most accurately expresses the main point of the passage?
Correct Answer
A
A is correct because it captures both the descriptive claim (that modern law has moved away from punishment toward maintaining economic activity) and the evaluative claim (that this approach serves society's best interests and should not be abandoned). The passage states that "Modern bankruptcy laws, in serving the needs of an interdependent society, serve the varied interests of the greatest number of citizens," warns that removing bankruptcy protection "would run the risk of preventing continued economic activity," and concludes that the "temptation to return to a focus on punishment... must be resisted." It also explains that reorganizations "are designed primarily to assure continued engagement in productive economic activity... providing creditors with the best hope of collecting," which A summarizes.
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