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The word "bankruptcy" comes from banes rotta, Italian for broken bench. The custom was that when a medieval trader failed to pay his creditors, his trading bench was broken. Since bankruptcy was taken off the street and put into the statute book, it has become rather more complicateD、

Bankruptcy is as necessary for capitalism as profit; together they make up the stick and carrot which persuade businessmen to work. InEurope the accountants and lawyers who make a living from overseeing bankrupt companies expect the coming year to provide a bumper crop; inAmerica bankruptcy courses are among the most popular at business schools. Only in Japan are experts talking about a possible decline in bankruptcies.
Analyzing companies involves much the same task worldwide: look at the accounts and you will get some idea of how much or how little money a firm makes.Bankruptcy laws, however, vary enormously from country to country, mainly because each starts from different historical perspectives. Yet they all tackle the same issues—and the most fundamental is how friendly the law should be to the debtor.
Countries whose bankruptcy laws are based on theBritish model view bankruptcy primarily as a way to recover creditors’ money. Typically, the courts replace the bankrupt firm’s management with a liquidator or a receiver whose mission is to pay back creditors as quickly as possible.
England’s first bankruptcy law was an "act against such persons as do make bankrupt". For centuriesBritish bankrupts went to debtors’ prison.Continental countries also took the creditors’ side.
In contrast, one ofAmerica’s attractions to immigrants was its very lack of a debtors’ prison.Bankruptcy is still viewed inAmerica as a side-effect of entrepreneurship. Managers of a bankrupt firm are often allowed to stay on.Cynics reckon that some well-know businessmen have made a career ont of taking companies into and out of bankruptcy.
The aim ofAmerican bankruptcy law is rehabilitation: to reorganize the company so that it can continue to trade, rather than .to see that the creditors are paid off. Thus, while an ailingAmerican company can opt for liquidation by filing under the chapter 7 of theBankruptcyCode, it can also file under chapter 11 to seek protection from its creditors.
Once a firm has gone into chapter 11 its management has to produce a reorganization plan: the creditors are arranged into committees to vote on it. These can become scrums where the various creditors’ relative seniority varies according to their lawyers’ eloquence.
Fans of theAmerican system argue that it gives companies a chance to recover.Critics say thatAmerican law favors the same managers who bankrupted the firm, that it encourages lawyers to prolong bankruptcy protection, that it favors big bankers over smaller trade creditors, and that shareholders, the last to be paid in liquidation, gain at the expense of debt-holders.
We can infer from the second paragraph that ______.A.bankruptcy is on the rise in bothEurope andAmerica with Japan being an exception
B.business is predicted to flourish in the coming year
C.bankruptcy is a course that business students like to major in
D.experts in bothEurope andAmerica earn more than those in Japan
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根据网考网移动考试中心的统计,该试题:

87%的考友选择了A选项

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3%的考友选择了D选项

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