Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Some economists say a company should be fined more than the profit it made from a crime so it doesn’t come out ahead. But because many corporate crimes aren’t caught, the fine would have to be much larger (e.g., $60M instead of $7M) to stop repeated offenses, and such huge fines could bankrupt companies and cost jobs. The author argues that, for practical reasons, penalties should also consider how morally bad the crime is and other effects, not just cost-and-benefit calculations.
Logic Breakdown
Note the author rejects both a minimal/slight fine and the economists' full 10× reckoning for a 1-in-10 detection ratio as impractical; choose the option that raises the fine above profit to signal moral condemnation but avoids bankrupting the firm.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage10.Suppose a corporation is convicted of a crime having a detection ratio of 1-in-10. Based on the passage, the author would be most likely to endorse which one of the following penalties?
Correct Answer
C
The passage shows that the economists' cost–benefit reckoning, when adjusted for a 1-in-10 detection ratio, would require a tenfold fine: 'A true reckoning of cost and benefit ... if the profit resulting from a crime were $6 million, the penalty would have to be not $7 million but at least $60 million, according to the economists' definition, to be just.' The author then objects that 'the astronomical penalties necessary to satisfy the full reckoning of cost and benefit might arguably put convicted corporations out of business' and concludes that 'some other criterion in addition to the reckoning of cost and benefit—such as the assignment of moral weight to particular crimes—is necessary so that penalties for corporate crimes will be practical as well as just.' Thus the author would endorse a fine higher than the profit that demonstrates community condemnation (moral weight) but that avoids putting the corporation out of business, which is choice C.
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