Library/PT 156/Sec 1/Reading Comp
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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

Focus on the author’s critique of Korobkin in the final paragraph: identify the claim that prioritizing noncreditors increases creditors' risk and causes creditors to charge more for credit, then choose the answer that follows from that claim.

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20.

The author would be most likely to agree with which one of the following statements?

Correct Answer
E
The author explicitly argues that Korobkin's approach increases creditors' risk and leads to higher borrowing costs: 'a fair accounting of the interests of other affected parties represents an increase in risk to creditors, since they are likely to recover less in the event of bankruptcy. Under such a regime, creditors charge more for credit, a result that has its own adverse economic effects.' If creditors charge more for credit, financing (for example, the establishment of a new business) becomes more expensive; choice E restates this consequence and thus matches the author's view.
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