Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Old bankruptcy law mostly meant selling a failing company's assets to pay creditors; newer law often lets companies reorganize and keep running. Jackson says bankruptcy should only be about collecting and dividing money for creditors, while Korobkin says that ignores others hurt by failure—workers, suppliers, and the community—and that we should include all affected parties and use long-term planning to try to save businesses when that helps the most harmed. But Korobkin’s plan could make creditors recover less (so credit would cost more) and doesn’t give a clear, evidence-based way to decide when saving a company is worth those trade-offs.
Logic Breakdown
Ask what the final paragraph is doing rhetorically: read it for its main task—does it criticize, support, refute, or propose? The paragraph enumerates objections to Korobkin's scheme, so it functions as a criticism of the position in paragraph 3.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage19.The primary purpose of the final paragraph of the passage is to do which one of the following?
Correct Answer
A
'But while Korobkin's approach is more equitable than Jackson's, it also has significant weaknesses.' The paragraph then details those weaknesses: 'First, a fair accounting of the interests of other affected parties represents an increase in risk to creditors...' and 'Furthermore, Korobkin's scheme provides no way of empirically assessing the relative vulnerability to loss of the various parties affected by a corporate bankruptcy.' These sentences explicitly present objections to Korobkin's two-principle plan (described in paragraph 3), so the primary purpose of the final paragraph is to provide criticisms of that position.
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