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Madrid, Spain—The laughter of children still spills over the walls of St. John the Baptist School. But it’s quite as loud t
Madrid, Spain—The laughter of children still spills over the walls of St. John the Baptist School. But it’s quite as loud t
admin
2011-02-05
106
问题
Madrid, Spain—The laughter of children still spills over the walls of St. John the Baptist School.
But it’s quite as loud these days. There are fewer children at the Madrid School—just like at other schools all across Spain.
Births in Spain have gone from boom—when couples commonly had a half-dozen children and dictator Francisco Franco rewarded the largest families—to bust.
Spanish women are having fewer babies than women of any other country in the world—an average of 1.24 per woman, according to a 1996 report by the Council of Europe. Spanish demographers say the rate has since fallen to 1.21.
Indeed, many European countries have low birth rates, giving the Continent an overall average of 1.5 births per woman. Italy is not far behind Spain, with a rate of 1.26. Germany and Greece follow at 1.35 and Austria and Russia at 1.4. The birth rate is 2.1 in US.
Experts say an economic crunch, the increase of women getting jobs, and society’s distancing from the Roman Catholic Church and its ban on contraception are behind Spain having the world’s lowest birth rate.
For four-year-old Daniel Benito, an energetic boy with dark, sparkling eyes, it means he eats breakfast and lunch at St. John the Baptist because both his parents go to work early. And he has no brothers or sisters to play with at home.
On the plus side, as an only child, Daniel gets lots of toys and new clothes. In fact as Spain’s birth rate slides to new lows, sales of toys, children’s clothes and baby food are increasing.
"There are fewer kids, but now they are richer kids," said sociologist Alfredo Campo. "Before, mothers used to make food for their babies. Now, nobody makes their own baby food ; they all buy ready-to-eat baby food. And mothers don’t have the time to be knitting baby booties."
Parents note that when they grew up in large families, they often wore hand-me-down clothes, received gifts only once or twice a year and used their imagination to make up games.
The new generation may be getting somewhat spoiled.
"The children come to school with their toys from home. If their toy breaks, they really don’t mind." Said Sagrario Pinto, director of St. John the Baptist’s preschool and kindergarten. "Their attitude is, ’Oh well, mommy will buy me a new one.’ They don’t value what they have. "
With more women joining the work force, it appears the days of Spanish couples having large families is a thing of the past.
After working long hours, journalist Sylvia Carrasco rushes home weeknights from work to spend precious moments with her only child, five-year-old Manuel, before his bedtime.
Like many women, Carasco was torn between having more children and her career. After much thought, she and her husband decided they did not have enough time to devote to a second child.
"As it is, we barely have the time to play with Manuel," she said, "I cannot stay home full time. I like to work outside the home—I’d never give it up."
One woman who climbed the career ladder in government complains that fathers with working wives don’t do enough to help care for the children.
"In a chauvinistic society, when a woman joins the work force it means double the amount of work for that woman," said Amalia Gomez, secretary-general of the social affairs Ministry and a mother of two. "If women can go to work and count on the man to shoulder some of the responsibility of the home, they’ll have more children."
They said global population would more likely grow from the current 5.8 billion to 10 billion in 2050—still a big increase.
And so far, the drop in school enrolment has meant improved student-teacher ratios. But with Spain loosening laws that made it difficult and costly to fire employees, the decrease in students may soon translate into teacher layoffs. The government is already allocating more money to social security because of Spain’ s aging population. But the government no longer encourages women to have more babies, as Franco did during his 1939-1975 rule.
Some observers predict a swing back to couples having more babies, although not as many as before.
"I believe in cycles," Gomez said. "Eventually it always comes around. "
The lowest birth rate in Spain is due to ______ and more women ______.
选项
答案
an economic crunch;getting jobs
解析
(出生率低的原因是经济紧缩以及越来越多的妇女选择工作。)
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本试题收录于:
B类竞赛(英语专业本科专科)题库大学生英语竞赛(NECCS)分类
0
B类竞赛(英语专业本科专科)
大学生英语竞赛(NECCS)
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