Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Environmentalists say that when a country owes a lot of international debt, it may push the country to make more exports and cut domestic spending, which could harm the environment (for example, by cutting down forests) and reduce services like health care or clean water. But studies show mixed or weak links between debt and environmental damage, many impacts haven’t been studied, and sometimes debt even leads governments to stop projects that would hurt the environment. So it’s unclear whether higher debt really makes a country’s quality of life worse.
Logic Breakdown
Scan for explicit examples of how debt repayment might change domestic projects; the passage gives a concrete example of abandoning construction projects (dams or roads) as a response that could avoid environmental harm.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.Which one of the following is identified in the passage as a response to the pressures of debt repayment that would avert a negative impact on the environment?
Correct Answer
C
The passage explicitly cites abandoning construction projects as a way debt repayment could avert environmental damage: 'For example, they might abandon plans to build new dams or roads, or eliminate subsidies that promote fertilizer or pesticide use.' Thus 'curtailing road construction' is directly identified as a debt-response that would avert a negative impact on the environment.
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