1 Harry Truman didn’t think his successor had the right training to be president. "Poor Ike — it won’t be a bit like the Arm

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问题 1     Harry Truman didn’t think his successor had the right training to be president. "Poor Ike — it won’t be a bit like the Army," he said. "He’ll sit there all day saying ,do this, do that,’and nothing will happen." Truman was wrong about Ike. Dwight Eisenhower had led a fractious alliance — you didn’t tell Winston Churchill what to do — in a massive, chaotic war. He was used to politics. But Truman’s insight could well be applied to another, even more venerated Washington figure, the CEO-turned cabinet secretary.
2     A 20-year bull market has convinced us all that CEOs are geniuses, so watch with astonishment the troubles of Donald Rumsfeld and Paul O’Neill.  Here are two highly regarded businessmen, obviously intelligent and well-informed, foundering in their jobs.
3     Actually, we shouldn’t be surprised. Rumsfeld and O’Neill are not doing badly despite having been successful CEOs but because of it. The record of senior businessmen in government is one of almost unrelieved disappointment. In fact, with the exception of Robert Rubin, it is difficult to think of a CEO who had a successful career in government.
4     Why is this? Well, first the CEO has to recognize that he is no longer the CEO. He is at best an adviser to the CEO, the president. But even the president is not really the CEO. No one is. Power in a corporation is concentrated and vertically structured.  Power in Washington is diffuse and horizontally spread out. The secretary might think he’s in charge of his agency. But the chairman of the congressional committee funding that agency feels the same. In his famous study "Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents," Richard Neustadt explains how little power the president actually has and concludes that the only lasting presidential power is "the power to persuade."
5     Take Rumsfeld’s attempt to transform the cold-war military into one geared for the future.  It’s innovative but deeply threatening to almost everyone in Washington. The Defense secretary did not try to sell it to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Congress, the budget office or the White House. As a result, the idea is collapsing.
6     Second, what power you have, you must use carefully.  For example, O’Neill’s position as Treasury secretary is one with little formal authority. Unlike Finance ministers around the world, Treasury does not control the budget. But it has symbolic power. The secretary is seen as the chief economic spokesman for the administration and, if he plays it right, the chief economic adviser for the president.
7     O’Neill has been publicly critical of the IMF’s bailout packages for developing countries while at the same time approving such packages for Turkey, Argentina and Brazil. As a result, he has gotten the worst of both worlds. The bailouts continue, but their effect in holstering investor confidence is limited because the markets are rattled by his skepticism.
8     Perhaps the government doesn’t do bailouts well. But that leads to a third rule: you can’t just quit. Jack Welch’s famous law for re-engineering General Electric was to be first or second in any given product category, or else get out of that business. But if the government isn’t doing a particular job at peak level, it doesn’t always have the option of relieving itself of that function. The Pentagon probably wastes a lot of money. But it can’t get out of the national-security business.
9     The key to former Treasury secretary Rubin’s success may have been that he fully understood that business and government are, in his words, "necessarily and properly very different." In a recent speech he explained, "Business functions around one predominate organizing principle, profitability ... Government, on the other hand, deals with a vast number of equally legitimate and often potentially competing objectives — for example, energy  production  versus  environmental  protection, or safety regulations versus productivity."
10     Rubin’s example shows that talented people can do well in government if they are willing to treat it as its own separate, serious endeavour. But having been bathed in a culture of adoration and flattery, it’s difficult for a CEO to believe he needs to listen and learn, particularly from those despised and poorly paid specimens, politicians, bureaucrats and the media. And even if he knows it intellectually, he just can’s live with it.

选项 A、regard the president as the CEO.
B、take absolute control of his department.
C、exercise more power than the congressional committee.
D、become acquainted with its power structure.

答案D

解析 <1>venerated受尊敬的
<2>CEO-turned cabinet secretary由CEO(chief executive official的缩写,即首席执行官或总经理)升任而来的内阁部长。secretary在美国英语中可表示“部长”,而在英国英语中为“大臣”。
<3>bull-market牛市,反义词语为bear market,为股票用语。这里指CEO过去的经历十分辉煌。
<4>founder失败,崩溃
<5>Rumsfeld and O’Neill are not doing badly despite having been successful CEOs butbecause of it.Rumsfeld和O’Neill虽然做CEO时很成功,但目前干得很糟糕。之所以如此,是因为他们在做CEO方面的成功经历。注意此处的句式not(despite)...but(because of)...,即此句中的not并不是修饰doing badly。此句的含义是:由于熟谙如何做CEO,他们会将做CEO的成功经验套用到做内阁部长的工作中去,而这正是他们失败的根源,因为政府部门与商业部门存在许多本质的不同(如权力结构)。
<6>The Defense secretary did not try to sell it to the Joint Chiefs of staff,Congress,thebudget office or the White House. the Defense secretary这里指Rumsfeld。sell这里指“说服某人接受”。
<7>IMF’s bailout, packages IMF为International Monetary Fund(国际货币基金组织)的缩写。bailout packages指应急(财政)援助计划。
<8>holster维持。原指“将手枪放入匣内”。
<9>at peak,level处于最好的水平
<10>specimens在口语中表示“家伙”、“怪人”,常带有贬义。
此题为细节理解题。据第3段与第4段我们知道,那些由CEO升任而来的内阁部长在新的岗位上往往不成功,是因为他们不能转变角色,因此,要在政府中取得成功,就必须首先认识到政府与公司在权力结构上的不同。据第4段第3、4句我们排除A。B、C明显不符。
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