Hey Sherry - thanks for the question!
You've run into one of the classic LSAT questions of all time, from the June 1992 LSAT (LR 1, #25), and this is an excellent question to test your understanding of conditional reasoning. Let's look at the stimulus first.
The second part of the first sentence often confuses students, and understanding the relationship here makes or breaks you on this question. Essentially, if they don't go bankrupt, what must have happened? They increased productivity 10 percent. That would be diagrammed as:

Not Bankrupt

10
The second sentence is a bit of a strange one, and establishes that if they can get 10 percent, then 20 percent is attainable. That diagrams as:

10

attain 20
That's an odd concept (if you can get 10, then it's necessary that you can attain 20), but that's what the author says, so we'll work with it.
Combined, of course, the two diagrams create the following chain:

Not Bankrupt

10

attain 20
So, looking at answer choice (B), you can see that it is actually a Mistaken Reversal, a classic wrong answer in a Must Be True question that features conditional reasoning.
Answer choice (E) is a contrapositive, and thus correct in a Must Be True question.
Please let me know if that helps. Thanks!
Jon Denning
PowerScore Test Preparation
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