Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Medium

PT134 S4 P1 Q3 Explanation

Deliberate Crimes and Utility Maximization

A free, expert breakdown of this official LSAT Reading Comprehension question.

TopicsApplicationLaw

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Passage

Determining the most effective way to deter deliberate crimes, such as fraud, as opposed to impulsive crimes, such as crimes of passion, is a problem currently being debated in the legal community. On one side of the debate are those scholars who believe that deliberate crimes are a product of the influence an economic principle that shows that these two positions, far from being antithetical, are surprisingly complementary.

The economic principle that reconciles the two positions is that of utility maximization, which holds that, given a choice of actions, rational individuals will choose the action that maximizes their anticipated overall satisfaction, or expected utility. The expected utility of an action is ascertained by determining the utilities of the possible outcomes individual’s decision to commit a crime can be analyzed as a rational economic choice.

According to the utility maximization principle a person who responds rationally to economic incentives or disincentives will commit a crime if the expected utility from doing so, given the chance of getting caught, exceeds the expected utility from activity that is lawful. Within this framework the two crime-deterrence methods have the same conflict, and that the optimal approach to crime deterrence would include elements of both deterrence strategies.

What this question is testing

Application

Topic

The author is showing how two camps that seem to disagree about deterring deliberate crimes (like fraud) can actually be reconciled — they're both right.

Framework

Problem-Solution.

Main Point

The simpler version: there are two camps. One says deliberate crime is caused by social conditions, so the fix is changing beliefs and giving people more economic opportunity. The other says it's a personal choice, so the fix is harsher penalties and better enforcement. The author says: you can use a basic economic idea — utility maximization — to show that both approaches actually work, just from different angles. So the best policy uses both.

P1: The two camps and the bridge

Camp 1: society causes crime, so change conditions. Camp 2: people choose to commit crimes, so make crime more costly. A new economic idea reconciles them.

P2: The economic idea

Utility maximization just means: rational people pick the option with the highest expected payoff (taking risk into account). You can apply this to a person deciding whether to commit a crime.

P3: How both camps fit

If a rational person commits a crime when crime's expected payoff exceeds the legal life's expected payoff, then there are two ways to flip the math. Make crime worse (raise enforcement, raise penalties — Camp 2). Make legal life better (more economic opportunity — Camp 1). Both work. The best policy uses both.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
3.

The explanation of the utility maximization principle in the passage suggests that which one of the following would be least appropriately described as a rational response

Answer choices

  1. Supported4% picked this

    In order to reduce his taxes, a waiter conceals a large part of his tip income from the government because he believes that it

    This is supported in the second paragraph

  2. Supported5% picked this

    A motorist avoids speeding on a certain stretch of road because she knows that it is heavily patrolled and that a speeding ticket will

    This is supported in the second paragraph

  3. Supported9% picked this

    An industrialist continues to illegally discharge an untreated pollutant into a river because the cost of treatment far exceeds the fine

    This is supported in the second paragraph

  4. Supported3% picked this

    A government offcial in an impoverished country risks prosecution for soliciting bribes because rampant inflation has rendered her government salary inadequate to

    This is supported in the second paragraph

  5. Correct79% picked this

    A worker physically assaults his former supervisor in a crowded workplace because he has been dismissed from his job and he believes that

    Why this is right

    This example fails to demonstrate someone making a choice based on an economic principle. The worker has been dismissed from his job and so there is no longer an economic expectation influencing his choice.

    Skill tested: Application · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

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