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
Locate the thesis and the conclusion: identify how the author presents the economists' penalty rule and then looks to refute or qualify it—choose the answer that says the passage argues against that economists' view.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage9.The primary purpose of the passage is to
Correct Answer
D
The passage describes the economists' position ("Some economists argue that the sole basis for determining the penalty should be the reckoning of cost and benefit") and then rejects that approach ("But this approach seems highly impractical if not impossible to follow"). The passage 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," showing the author's primary purpose is to argue against that economists' view of how to penalize corporate crime.
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