Library/PT 145/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Approach: identify the passage's progression—note the opening question, the economists' single‑criterion proposal, the important complication (detection ratios and the $60 million example), the identified practical flaw, and the concluding recommendation to add a moral criterion. Supportive passage sentences: "How severe should the punishment be for a corporate crime—e.g., a crime in which a corporation profits from knowingly and routinely selling harmful products to consumers?"; "Some economists argue that the sole basis for determining the penalty should be the reckoning of cost and benefit: the penalty levied should exceed the profit that accrued to the corporation as a result of committing the crime."; "But this approach seems highly impractical if not impossible to follow."; "A true reckoning of cost and benefit would therefore have to take estimated detection ratios into account...the penalty would have to be not $7 million but at least $60 million, according to the economists' definition, to be just."; "Thus, 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."

Passage Stimulus

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12.

Which one of the following most accurately represents the organization of the passage?

Correct Answer
A
Choice A accurately maps the passage's structure: it opens with a question about appropriate punishment; summarizes the economists' answer (cost–benefit rule); presents a crucial aspect/complication of that answer (detection ratios and the $60 million example); identifies the flaw (the approach is impractical and could lead to astronomical penalties and job losses); and affirms the need for an alternative or supplemental criterion (moral weight). The quoted sentences above correspond to each of these steps.
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