Library/PT 147/Sec 3/Reading Comp
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Reading Comprehension

Passage Breakdown

Both passages compare flat taxes (one single rate) with graduated taxes. Passage A says Estonia’s flat tax has worked in real life and can still be fair by exempting a basic amount; also, because complicated tax codes let rich people dodge taxes, wealthy people often end up paying about the same under a flat tax. Passage B says people misunderstand graduated taxes (higher rates apply only to the extra income above set cutoffs), and because poor people need every dollar for basics, a flat tax that lowers taxes for both the poor and the rich could force the middle class to pay more.

Logic Breakdown

Compare Passage A's claims with Passage B's topics and identify a claim A makes that B does not discuss — focus on A's discussion of tax-avoidance incentives/opportunities arising from complex codes and the simplifying effect of a flat tax.

Passage Stimulus

Passage Redacted

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25.

Which one of the following is a conclusion for which passage A argues but that passage B does not address?

Correct Answer
D
Passage A argues that the complexity of progressive codes creates large incentives and opportunities for high-income earners to avoid tax, and by implication a flat, simpler system reduces those opportunities: "Under the systems operating in most developed countries, the incentives for high-income earners to avoid tax (legally or otherwise) are enormous; and the opportunities to do so, which arise from the very complexity of the codes, are commensurately large." Passage A then contrasts this with flat-tax regimes: "So it is unsurprising that high-income earners usually pay about as much tax under new flat-tax regimes as they would have paid under the previous codes." Passage B, by contrast, focuses on how graduated taxes are actually applied and on distributional/fairness effects (e.g., "People in higher brackets don't pay the higher rate on their entire income" and "Even some of the flat tax proposals recognize this, and want to exempt a primary layer from the tax system.") and never addresses incentives or opportunities for tax avoidance. Therefore D — that a flat tax decreases opportunities and incentives for high-income earners to avoid tax — is a conclusion Passage A argues (directly or by implication) that Passage B does not address.
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