首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Into the Unknown The world has never seen population ageing before. Can it cope? [A] Until the early 1990s nobody mu
Into the Unknown The world has never seen population ageing before. Can it cope? [A] Until the early 1990s nobody mu
admin
2013-08-30
40
问题
Into the Unknown
The world has never seen population ageing before. Can it cope?
[A] Until the early 1990s nobody much thought about whole populations getting older.The UN had the foresight to convene a “world assembly on ageing” back in 1982, but that came and went. By 1994 the World Bank had noticed that something big was happening. In a report entitled “Averting the Old Age Crisis”, it argued that pension arrangements in most countries were unsustainable.
[B] For the next ten years a succession of books, mainly by Americans, sounded the alarm. They had titles like Young vs Old, Gray Dawn and The Coming Generational Storm, and their message was blunt: health-care systems were heading for the rocks, pensioners were taking young people to the cleaners, and soon there would be intergenerational warfare.
[C] Since then the debate has become less emotional, not least because a lot more is known about the subject. Books, conferences and research papers have multiplied. International organisations such as the OECD and the EU issue regular reports. Population ageing is on every agenda, from G8 economic conferences to NATO summits. The World Economic Forum plans to consider the future of pensions and health care at its prestigious Davos conference early next year. The media, including this newspaper, are giving the subject extensive coverage.
[D] Whether all that attention has translated into sufficient action is another question. Governments in rich countries now accept that their pension and health-care promises will soon become unaffordable, and many of them have embarked on reforms, but so far only timidly. That is not surprising: politicians with an eye on the next election will hardly rush to introduce unpopular measures that may not bear fruit for years, perhaps decades.
[E] The outline of the changes needed is clear. To avoid fiscal (财政的) meltdown, public pensions and health-care provision will have to be reined back severely and taxes may have to go up. By far the most effective method to restrain pension spending is to give people the opportunity to work longer, because it increases tax revenues and reduces spending on pensions at the same time. It may even keep them alive longer. John Rother, the AARP’s head of policy and strategy, points to studies showing that other things being equal, people who remain at work have lower death rates than their retired peers.
[F] Younger people today mostly accept that they will have to work for longer and that their pensions will be less generous. Employers still need to persuaded that older workers are worth holding on to. That may be because they have had plenty of younger ones to choose from, partly thanks to the post-war baby-boom and partly because over the past few decades many more women have entered the labour force, increasing employers’ choice. But the reservoir of women able and willing to take up paid work is running low, and the baby-boomers are going grey.
[G]In many countries immigrants have been filling such gaps in the labour force as have already emerged (and remember that the real shortage is still around ten years off). Immigration in the developed world is the highest it has ever been, and it is making a useful difference. In still-fertile America it currently accounts for about 40% of total population growth, and in fast-ageing western Europe for about 90%.
[H] On the face of it, it seems the perfect solution. Many developing countries have lots of young people in need of jobs; many rich countries need helping hands that will boost tax revenues and keep up economic growth. But over the next few decades labour forces in rich countries are set to shrink so much that inflows of immigrants would have to increase enormously to compensate: to at least twice their current size in western Europe’s most youthful countries, and three times in the older ones. Japan would need a large multiple of the few immigrants it has at present. Public opinion polls show that people in most rich countries already think that immigration is too high. Further big increases would be politically unfeasible.
[I] To tackle the problem of ageing populations at its root, “old” countries would have to rejuvenate (使年轻) themselves by having more of their own children. A number of them have tried, some more successfully than others. But it is not a simple matter of offering financial incentives or providing more child care. Modern urban life in rich countries is not well adapted to large families. Women find it hard to combine family and career. They often compromise by having just one child.
[J] And if fertility in ageing countries does not pick up? It will not be the end of the world, at least not for quite a while yet, but the world will slowly become a different place. Older societies may be less innovative and more strongly disinclined to take risks than younger ones. By 2025 at the latest, about half the voters in America and most of those in western European countries will be over 50—and older people turn out to vote in much greater numbers than younger ones. Academic studies have found no evidence so far that older voters have used their power at the ballot box to push for policies that specifically benefit them, though if in future there are many more of them they might start doing so.
[K] Nor is there any sign of the intergenerational warfare predicted in the 1990s. After all, older people themselves mostly have families. In a recent study of parents and grown-up children in 11 European countries, Karsten Hank of Mannheim University found that 85% of them lived within 25km of each other and the majority of them were in touch at least once a week.
[L] Even so, the shift in the centre of gravity to older age groups is bound to have a profound effect on societies, not just economically and politically but in all sorts of other ways too. Richard Jackson and Neil Howe of America’s CSIS, in a thoughtful book called The Graying of the Great Powers, argue that, among other things, the ageing of the developed countries will have a number of serious security implications.
[M] For example, the shortage of young adults is likely to make countries more reluctant to commit the few they have to military service. In the decades to 2050,America will find itself playing an ever-increasing role in the developed world’s defence effort. Because America’s population will still be growing when that of most other developed countries is shrinking, America will be the only developed country that still matters geopolitically (地缘政治上).
Ask me in 2020
[N] There is little that can be done to stop population ageing, so the world will have to live with it. But some of the consequences can be alleviate. Many experts now believe that given the right policies, the effects, though grave, need not be catastrophic. Most countries have recognised the need to do something and are beginning to act.
[O] But even then there is no guarantee that their efforts will work. What is happening now is historically unprecedented. Ronald Lee, director of the Centre on the Economics and Demography of Ageing at the University of California, Berkeley, puts it briefly and clearly: “We don’t really know what population ageing will be like, because nobody has done it yet.”
Immigration as a means to boost the shrinking labour force may meet with resistance in some rich countries.
选项
答案
H
解析
根据题目中的Immigration,labour force及rich countries将本题出处定位于[H]段。本段提到,未来几十年发达国家需要依靠移民的方式来解决劳动力萎缩这一问题,接着最后两句又指出,民意测验显示大多数发达国家的人已经认为移民数量过高。进一步大量移民在政治上没有可行性。由此可见,移民这一解决劳动力萎缩问题的方式很有可能在一些富裕国家会受到抵制。题干正是对这一信息的同义转述。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/EcHFFFFM
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledCertificateCraze.Youshouldwriteatleast150words
Peopleinsunny,outdoorsystates—Louisiana,Hawaii,Florida—saytheyarethehappiestAmericans,andresearchersthinktheykno
Peopleinsunny,outdoorsystates—Louisiana,Hawaii,Florida—saytheyarethehappiestAmericans,andresearchersthinktheykno
Educationisalongprocessthatnotonlyprovidesuswithbasicskillssuchasliteracyandnumeracy,butisalsoessentialin
A、Theycanliveinmeadows.B、Theycanjumphightogetfood.C、Theycanliveoffmanydifferentkindsofhosts.D、Theycansurv
Pronouncingalanguageisaskill.Everynormalpersonisexpertintheskillofpronouncinghisownlanguage,butfewpeoplear
MuslimSudanisoneoftheIslamized【B1】______regions.InEastAfricamusicalformsshowingAraborIslamicinfluencearefoun
Opinionpollsarenowbeginningtoshowthat,whoeveristoblameandwhateverhappensfromnowon,highunemploymentisprobabl
A、Hawaiiiscoolernow.B、ThevegetableshavebecomeaccustomedtotheweatherinHawaii.C、Theyarecheatedtobelievethatthe
Apunctualpersonisinthehabitofdoingeverythingatthepropertimeandisneverlateinkeepinganappointment.Theunpunc
随机试题
新城区往往适于开发商业中心,写字楼、餐饮及娱乐用房。()
患者李某,女性,50岁。心痛迁延不愈,并出现心悸喘促,不能平卧,动则尤甚,下肢浮肿,手足欠温,小便短少。舌淡,苔白滑,脉沉细。其治法是
艾滋病患者需要吸痰时,做法错误的是()。
假设开发法更深的理论依据,类似于地租原理。()
编制施工机械合班使用定额时,施工机械必须消耗时间包括有效工作时间,不可避负的中断时间以及()。
甲塑料制品公司(以下简称“甲公司”)与乙化工机械制造公司(以下简称“乙公司”),于2006年5月18日签订了一份买卖注塑设备合同,甲公司为买方,乙公司为卖方。双方在合同中约定:(1)由乙公司于10月30日前分二批向甲公司提供注塑设备10套,每套价
学生摄影小组举办摄影大赛属于学生课外活动中的()。
农村电网________升级,事关广大农村地区的长远发展。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是:
“教育即生活”“教育即成长”“教育即经验之不断改造”等教育思想的提出者是()。
过去我们的感知完全依靠五觉,但在未来会发生变化,类脑智能、图像传感、仿生嗅觉、声音传感、触觉传感等技术在延伸和突破着人类原有的生物感知系统。虚实混一打破了人类几万年间延续下来的感知的界限,无人驾驶、智能语音、智能工业、可穿戴设备等领域因为这些延伸的感知而诞
最新回复
(
0
)