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
Approach: Identify Passage A's final claim — that high-income earners "usually pay about as much tax under new flat-tax regimes as they would have paid under the previous codes" because "the opportunities to do so ... arise from the very complexity of the codes" — and choose the reply by Passage B's author that best undercuts that causal claim. Supporting quotes: Passage A: "the opportunities to do so, which arise from the very complexity of the codes, are commensurately large"; "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: "graduated progressive taxes treat all taxpayers equally"; "People in higher brackets don't pay the higher rate on their entire income, only on the portion of income over a specified amount."
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage27.Which one of the following, if true, would be the most reasonable response for the author of passage B to make to the final argument of passage A?
Correct Answer
B
Option B is correct because it directly rebuts Passage A's implication that the graduated rate structure is what enables tax avoidance. By attributing avoidance to "loopholes and special deductions" rather than to the fact that the code is graduated, this response preserves Passage B's defense of progressive rates (that they "treat all taxpayers equally") and shows that closing loopholes — not adopting a flat tax — could address avoidance. Thus B most directly undermines A's reason for preferring a flat tax.
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