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
READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
READING PASSAGE 2 You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
admin
2012-09-10
24
问题
READING PASSAGE 2
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 15-27, which are based on Reading Passage 2 below.
Fun for the Masses
Americans worry that the distribution of income is increasingly unequal.
Examining leisure spending changes that picture.
A
Are you better off than you used to be? Even after six years of sustained economic growth, Americans worry about that question. Economists who plumb government income statistics agree that Americans’incomes, as measured in inflation-adjusted dollars, have risen more slowly in the past two decades than in earlier times, and that some workers’ real incomes have actually fallen. They also agree that by almost any measure, income is distributed less equally than it used to be. Neither of those claims, however, sheds much light on whether living standards are rising or falling. This is because ’living standard’ is a highly amorphous concept. Measuring how much people earn is relatively easy, at least compared with measuring how well they live.
B
A recent paper by Dora Costa, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, looks at the living-standards debate from an unusual direction. Rather than worrying about cash incomes, Ms Costa investigates Americans’recreational habits over the past century. She finds that people of all income levels have steadily increased the amount of time and money they devote to having fun. The distribution of dollar incomes may have become more skewed in recent years, but leisure is more evenly spread than ever.
C
Ms Costa bases her research on consumption surveys dating back as far as 1888. The industrial workers surveyed in that year spent, on average, three-quarters of their incomes on food, shelter and clothing. Less than 2% of the average family’s income was spent on leisure but that average hid large disparities. The share of a family’s budget that was spent on having fun rose sharply with its income: the lowest-income families in this working-class sample spent barely 1% of their budgets on recreation, while higher earners spent more than 3%. Only the latter group could afford such extravagances as theatre and concert performances, which were relatively much more expensive than they are today.
D
Since those days, leisure has steadily become less of a luxury. By 1991, the average household needed to devote only 38% of its income to the basic necessities, and was able to spend 6% on recreation. Moreover, Ms Costa finds that the share of the family budget spent on leisure now rises much less sharply with income than it used to. At the beginning of this century a family’s recreational spending tended to rise by 20% for every 10% rise in income. By 1972-73, a 10% income gain led to roughly a 15% rise in recreational spending, and the increase fell to only 13% in 1991. What this implies is that Americans of all income levels are now able to spend much more of their money on having fun.
E
One obvious cause is that real income overall has risen. If Americans in general are richer, their consumption of entertainment goods is less likely to be affected by changes in their income. But Ms Costa reckons that rising incomes are responsible for, at most, half of the changing structure of leisure spending. Much of the rest may be due to the fact that poorer Americans have more time off than they used to. In earlier years, Iow-wage workers faced extremely long hours and enjoyed few days off. But since the 1940s, the less skilled (and lower paid) have worked ever-fewer hours, giving them more time to enjoy leisure pursuits.
F
Conveniently, Americans have had an increasing number of recreational possibilities to choose from. Public investment in sports complexes, parks and golf courses has made leisure cheaper and more accessible. So too has technological innovation. Where listening to music used to imply paying for concert tickets or owning a piano, the invention of the radio made music accessible to everyone and virtually free. Compact discs, videos and other paraphernalia have widened the choice even further.
G
At a time when many economists are pointing accusing fingers at technology for causing a widening inequality in the wages of skilled and unskilled workers, Ms Costa’s research gives it a much more egalitarian face. High earners have always been able to afford amusement. By lowering the price of entertainment, technology has improved the standard of living of those in the lower end of the income distribution. The implication of her results is that once recreation is taken into account, the differences in Americans’ living standards may not have widened so much after all.
H
These findings are not water-tight. Ms Costa’s results depend heavily upon what exactly is classed as a recreational expenditure. Reading is an example. This was the most popular leisure activity for working men in 1888, accounting for one-quarter of all recreational spending. In 1991, reading took only 16% of the entertainment dollar. But the American Department of Labour’s expenditure surveys do not distinguish between the purchase of a mathematics tome and that of a best-selling novel. Both are classified as recreational expenses. If more money is being spent on textbooks and professional books now than in earlier years, this could make ’recreational’spending appear stronger than it really is.
I
Although Ms Costa tries to address this problem by showing that her results still hold even when tricky categories, such as books,are removed from the sample, the difficulty is not entirely eliminated. Nonetheless, her broad conclusion seems fair. Recreation is more available to all and less dependent on income. On this measure at least, inequality of living standards has fallen.
选项
答案
Ⅹ
解析
lst and last 3 sentences of paragraph.
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/U5EYFFFM
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Mr.Hernandez’sstudentsfilledoutasurveyaskinghowmanyhourseachstudentwatchedtelevisionover7days.Theresultsfrom
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
Mandyhasagardenthatisshapedlikearighttriangle,asshownbelow.Mandywantstoextendeachofthesidelengthsofher
ThecompanyatwhichMarkisemployedhas80employees,eachofwhomhasadifferentsalary.Mark’ssalaryof$43,700isthesec
Eighthundredinsectswereweighed,andtheresultingmeasurements,inmilligrams,aresummarizedintheboxplotbelow.(a)What
Thegraphaboveshowsthedistributionofthreedifferentflavorsofhardcandies—cherry,lemon,andlime—inacandyjar.Ifal
Supposeyouwanttoselecta3-personcommitteefromagroupof9students.Howmanywaysaretheretodothis?
Thefoundationhasbeenappropriatelylabeled______ofthearts,asmanypaintersandartistshavereceiveditsfinancialsupport
随机试题
初产妇,29岁。顺利产下一男婴,自诉连续2天发热,多汗,伴下腹阵痛。查体:体温37.5℃,子宫底脐下2指,无压痛,会阴伤口无肿胀及压痛,恶露暗红色,有腥味,双乳胀、有硬结。该产妇腹痛的原因是
CT扫描成像的基本步骤可分为:产生X线,采集数据,重建图像和显示图像。CT成像方式是
治疗牛胎衣不下,子宫内给药位置应在
实施人工授精可能产生的伦理问题如下,除外
小儿指纹郁滞,推之不畅,应属
下列关于体温生理波动的叙述,错误的是
张先生一家三口人,储蓄较少。张先生在油田工作,经常出差作业在外,是家庭的主要收入来源,妻子为教师,收入不高,孩子2岁。为防止张先生发生意外而严重危及家庭生活支出及培养孩子的经济来源,该家庭以张先生为被保险人,购买了一张20年期家庭收入保险单,每月收入保险金
矫正对象具有( )性格特征。
阅读下面材料,回答131~133题。海城市甲公司研发部门技术人员A按公司安排开发一项商业秘密,用于甲公司生产的制鞋机中,甲公司生产的制鞋机因此在华东地区长期销路很好,市场影响大,知名度很高,有时甚至缺货,海城市乙公司也生产制鞋机,由于技术相对落后
给定资料1.进入2018年毕业季,一则关于“95后平均7个月就离职”的调查报告引来网友热议。近年来,随着90后乃至95后步人社会,在这些职场新生代中,一言不合就离职的案例似乎越来越多。“其实谁也不想这样跳来跳去的,真的很累,但如果内心对
最新回复
(
0
)