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
In the following article some paragraphs have been removed. For Questions 66~70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the lis
In the following article some paragraphs have been removed. For Questions 66~70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the lis
admin
2011-01-02
40
问题
In the following article some paragraphs have been removed. For Questions 66~70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the list A~F to fit into each of the numbered gaps. There is one paragraph which does not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
The press is constantly reminding us that the dramatic increase in the age of our population over the next 30 or so years will cause national healthcare systems to collapse, economies to crumple under the strain of pension demands and disintegrating families to buckle under increasing care commitments. Yet research at Oxford is beginning to expose some of the widespread myths that underlie this rhetoric. Demographic ageing is undoubtedly a reality. Life expectancy in developed countries has risen continuously over the past century, increasing the percentage of those over the age of 60 relative to those under the age of 15. By 2030 half the population of Western Europe will be over the age of 50, with a predicted average life expectancy of a further 40 years. By then, a quarter of the population will be over 65 and by 2050 the UK’s current number of 10,000 centenarians are predicted to have reached a quarter of a million. Some demographers have even suggested that half of all baby girls born in the West today will live to see the next century.
66.______
Indeed, if this could be achieved throughout the world, it would surely count as the success of civilization, for then we would also have conquered the killers of poverty, disease, famine and war.
Decreasing mortality rates, increasing longevity and declining fertility mean smaller percentages of young people within populations. Over the past 20 years life expectancy at birth in the UK has risen by four years for men (to75) and three years for women (to 80). Meanwhile fertility rates across Europe have declined more or less continuously over the past 40 years and remain well below the levels required for European populations to be able to replace themselves without substantive immigration. But again, rather than seeing this as a doom and gloom scenario, we need to explore the positive aspects of these demographics. The next 50 years should provide us with an opportunity to enjoy the many advantages of a society with a mature population structure. 67.______
The first of these is the current political rhetoric which claims that health services across the Western world are collapsing under the strain of demographic ageing.
68.______
The second myth is the view that the ratio of workers to non-workers will become so acute that Western economies will collapse, compounded by a massive growth in pension debt. While there are undoubted concerns over current pension shortfalls, it is aiso clear that working lives will themselves change over the next few decades, with a predicted increase in flexible and part-time work and the probable extension of working life until the age of 70. Indeed, we have to recognize that we cannot expect to retire at the age of 50 and then be able to support ourselves for another 40 or so years. Neither a solid pension scheme nor savings can carry people that long.
69.______
A further myth is that we will all live in loose, multigenerational families, experiencing increased emotional distancing from our kin. Evidence from a variety of studies across the developed world suggests that, if anything, the modem family is actually becoming more close-knit. Work carded out by the Oxford Institute in Scandinavia and in a Pan-European Family Care Study, for example, shows that despite the influence of the welfare state, over the past 10 years, people have come to value family relationships more than previously.
70.______
In the developed world, therefore, we can see actual benefits from population ageing: a better balance between age groups, mature and less volatile societies, with an emphasis on age integration. The issues will be very different in other parts of the world.
Herein lies another myth: that the less developed world will escape from demographic ageing. Instead, the massive increase in the age of populations facing these countries-predicted to be up to one billion older people within 30 years--is potentially devastating. The problem is not only that demographic ageing is occurring at a far greater pace than we have seen’in Western nations, but also that few if any developing countries have the economic development and infrastructure necessary to provide widespread public pensions and healthcare to these growing elderly populations.
As a result, older people are among the poorest in every developing country. They have the lowest levels of income, education and literacy, they lack savings and assets, have only limited access to work, and even in times of crisis are usually the last to be cared for under emergency aid programmes. Perhaps of most concern is healthcare, for as we conquer acute diseases, we are going to see a rapid increase in levels of chronic illness and disability, but no long-term care programmes or facilities to tackle this.
A. Since it is likely that a longer active working life will coincide with a predicted labor shortage resulting from a lack of younger workers, we need to provide the opportunities and training to encourage older men and women to remain economically productive. Our studies show that there are benefits from having an age-in-tegrated workforce. It is another myth that older workers are less productive than younger ones. In fact, the combined energy of younger workers with the experience of older ones can lead to increased productivity—something from which young and old alike will benefit.
B. In 2001, in recognition of the significance of these demographic changes and the global challenges and opportunities that will accompany them, the Oxford Institute of Ageing was established at the University. It is made up of researchers in demography, sociology, economics, social anthropology, philosophy and psychology, with links to other specialists in medicine, biology, law and policy in research units across the University. This cross-disciplinary approach has made it possible to challenge some of the most pervasive myths about ageing societies.
C. As Institute healthcare ethicist Kenneth Howse points out, family obligations towards older relatives may change over the next 20 years, but current indications are that families are retaining a strong responsibility to care. Furthermore, as societies age, the contributory role of older people as grandparents becomes more important. Work by Institute researchers on another European Union study on multi-generational families has highlighted the role that grandparents play by freeing up the responsibilities of the younger reproductive population.
D. It is clear that the changing demographic landscape poses challenges for the future. The necessity now is to develop appropriate economic, social and political structures to take advantage of the opportunities that mature societies will bring, while ensuring that there are appropriate safety nets for those left vulnerable within these populations—which will include both young and old alike.
E. Rather than fearing such a future, however, we should see this trend as a great success. It must undoubtedly be a major achievement of civilization that most individuals within a society can expect to enjoy a long and healthy lifespan.
F. George Leeson, a demographer at the Institute, points out that while a number of cross-national studies have considered the determinants of spiraling healthcare costs, only one has found the explanatory factor to be the proportion of the population aged 65 and over. Rather, it is growth in income, lifestyle characteristics and environmental factors such as technology and drugs that are driving up healthcare costs. In addition, the costs are shifting between population groups. The key here, he adds, is to develop sufficiently flexible health service structures to shift not only economic resources but also personnel.
选项
答案
B
解析
该空缺下面的段落都是对每一个“myth”的揭示。谁来揭示呢?B项中提到牛津大学老龄化研究中心成立各个问题研究组。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/34Hd777K
本试题收录于:
公共英语五级笔试题库公共英语(PETS)分类
0
公共英语五级笔试
公共英语(PETS)
相关试题推荐
Theword"mass"inLine5couldbestbereplacedbyThesecondparagraphimpliesthatpeoplearemorelikelytobelievestories
AControlofRespirationBBeautyofFreshCutFlowersCRoleofRespirationDMostImportantAspectofFlowerCareENeed
AControlofRespirationBBeautyofFreshCutFlowersCRoleofRespirationDMostImportantAspectofFlowerCareENeed
Thesteadilyrisingcostoflaboronthewaterfronthasgreatlyincreasedthecostofshippingcargobywater.
ImproveComputer-researchSkillsLikemanycollegestudents,JoseJuarezcarriesaroundapocket-sizedcomputerthatletshi
IsThereaWaytoKeeptheBritain’sEconomyGrowing?1.Intoday’sknowledgeeconomy,nationssurviveonthethingstheydo
IsThereaWaytoKeeptheBritain’sEconomyGrowing?1.Intoday’sknowledgeeconomy,nationssurviveonthethingstheydo
OntheTrialoftheHoneyBadgerOnarecentfieldtriptotheKalahariDesert,ateamofresearcherslearnalotmoreabout
Wecanutilizewaterforproducingelectricpower.
Dr.WilsonandMr.Wanghavemetbefore.
随机试题
无期徒刑
《情僧录》《风月宝鉴》《金陵十二钗》是同一部名著的名字,这部名著是()
A.普通感冒B.疱疹性咽峡炎C.细菌性咽一扁桃体炎D.流感E.急性气管一支气管炎男性,60岁。高热1天,伴乏力、肌肉酸痛、鼻塞、咽痛。体检:双肺呼吸音清,胸透未见异常。可诊断为
消化性溃疡患者出现全腹压痛、反跳痛及板样强直,应考虑
患者饮食稍有不慎,即易呕吐,倦怠乏力,口干不欲饮,四肢不温,时有大便溏薄,面色白,舌质淡,脉濡弱。其诊断是
基金管理人的合规管理部门实施的合规风险评估和测试,包括()。Ⅰ.通过现场审核对各项政策和程序的合规性进行测试Ⅱ.询问政策和程序存在的缺陷并进行相应调查Ⅲ.合规性测试结果通过合规风险报告路线向上报告Ⅳ.所有合规性测试结果最终需要报
甲公司通过其在中国的30家店铺销售多种高质量的运动服和运动鞋。在国家经济不断增长的情况下,该公司目前是盈利的,但这几年的利润空间一直在减少,公司尚未对此查明原因。每家店铺均采用电子系统记录库存。所有商品都由各店铺提供详细的产品要求,然后由驻孟加拉国的总部集
(2017年)2017年2月10日,甲公司向乙公司签发一张金额为50万元的商业汇票,以支付所欠货款。汇票到期日为2017年8月10日。A银行作为承兑人在汇票票面上签章。3月10日,乙公司将该汇票背书转让给丙公司,用于支付装修工程款,并在汇票上注明:“票据
下列运算正确的是().
在Access中,打开VBA的快捷键是()。
最新回复
(
0
)