Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage explains a puzzle: if a ruler truly had unlimited legal power, they could legally limit or give up that power, which would mean they no longer had unlimited power. North and Weingast show this mattered in history: 17th–18th century English and French monarchs who could do anything couldn’t make trustworthy promises, so lenders charged them higher interest. After England’s Glorious Revolution, Parliament controlled money, making government borrowing more credible and cheaper. But the author warns the paradox wasn’t solved—it just moved from the king to Parliament, since Parliament also can’t legally bind its own future power.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what role the mention of the monarchies' need for capital plays: locate the sentences that tie that need to the monarchs' inability to make credible commitments and the resulting borrowing problems.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage25.The author mentions the English and French monarchies' need for capital (first sentence of the fourth paragraph) primarily in order to
Correct Answer
D
The sentence about needing capital sets up why the paradox of omnipotence mattered in practice: monarchs needed funds but could not credibly commit to repay, which made borrowing costly. Support: 'In the struggle to expand their empires, the English and French monarchies required vast amounts of capital.' and 'At the outset of the seventeenth century, however, neither regime could credibly commit itself to repay debts or to honor property rights.' Consequently, 'these monarchs earned a reputation for expropriating wealth, repudiating debts, and reneging upon commitments. Not surprisingly, creditors took such behavior into account and demanded higher interest rates from monarchs...' These sentences show the need for capital explains why the paradox produced acute practical (financial) problems for those monarchies.
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