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
Passage Three (1) Which would you prefer to be: a medieval monarch or a modern office-worker? The king has armies of servan
Passage Three (1) Which would you prefer to be: a medieval monarch or a modern office-worker? The king has armies of servan
admin
2022-09-07
39
问题
Passage Three
(1) Which would you prefer to be: a medieval monarch or a modern office-worker? The king has armies of servants. He wears the finest silks and eats the richest foods. But he is also a martyr to toothache. He is prone to fatal infections. It takes him a week by carriage to travel between palaces. And he is tired of listening to the same jesters (小丑). Life as a 21st-century office drone looks more appealing once you think about modern dentistry, antibiotics, air travel, smartphones and YouTube.
(2) The question is more than just a parlour game. It shows how tricky it is to compare living standards over time. Yet such comparisons are not just routinely made, but rely heavily on a single metric (衡量标准): gross domestic product (GDP). This one number has become shorthand for material well-being, even though it is a deeply flawed gauge of prosperity, and getting worse all the time. That may in turn be distorting levels of anxiety in the rich world about everything from stagnant incomes to disappointing productivity growth. Faulty speedometer
(3) Defenders of GDP say that the statistic is not designed to do what is now asked of it. A creature of the 1930s slump and the exigencies of war in the 1940s, its original purpose was to measure the economy’s capacity to produce. Since then, GDP has become a lodestar for policies to set taxes, fix unemployment and manage inflation.
(4) Yet it is often wildly inaccurate: Nigeria’s GDP was bumped up by 89% in 2014, after number-crunchers (做财务统计的人) adjusted their methods. Guesswork prevails; the size of the paid-sex market in Britain is assumed to expand in line with the male population; charges at lap-dancing clubs are a proxy for prices. Revisions are common, and in big, rich countries, bar America, tend to be upwards. Since less attention is paid to revised figures, this adds to an often exaggerated impression that America is doing far better than Europe. It also means that policymakers take decisions based on faulty data.
(5) If GDP is failing on its own terms, as a measurement of the value-added in an economy, its use as a welfare benchmark is even more dubious. That has always been so: the benefits of sanitation, better health care and the comforts of heating or air-conditioning meant that GDP growth almost certainly understated the true advance in living standards in the decades after the Second World War. But at least the direction of travel was the same. GDP grew rapidly; so did quality of life. Now GDP is still growing (albeit more slowly), but living standards are thought to be stuck. Part of the problem is widening inequality: median household income in America, adjusted for inflation, has barely budged for 25 years. But increasingly, too, the things that people hold dear are not being captured by the main yardstick of value.
(6) With a few exceptions, such as computers, what is produced and consumed is assumed to be of constant quality. That assumption worked well enough in an era of mass-produced, standardized goods. It is less reliable when a growing share of the economy consists of services. Firms compete for custom on the quality of output and how tailored it is to individual tastes. If restaurants serve fewer but more expensive meals, it pushes up inflation and lowers GDP, even if this reflects changes, such as fresher ingredients or fewer tables, which customers want. The services to consumers provided by Google and Facebook are free, so are excluded from GDP. When paid-for goods, such as maps and music recordings, become free digital services they too drop out of GDP. The convenience of online shopping and banking is a boon to consumers. But if it means less investment in buildings, it detracts from GDP.
Stop counting, start grading
(7) Measuring prosperity better requires three changes. The easiest is to improve GDP as a gauge of production. Junking it altogether is no answer; GDP’s enduring appeal is that it offers, or seems to, a summary statistic that tells people how well an economy is doing. Instead, statisticians should improve how GDP data are collected and presented. To minimize revisions, they should rely more on tax records, Internet searches and other troves of contemporaneous statistics, such as credit-card transactions, than on the standard surveys of businesses or consumers. Private firms are already showing the way—scraping vast quantities of prices from e-commerce sites to produce improved inflation data, for example.
(8) Second, services-dominated rich countries should start to pioneer a new, broader annual measure, which would aim to capture production and living standards more accurately. This new metric—call it GDP-plus—would begin with a long-overdue conceptual change; the inclusion in GDP of unpaid work in the home, such as caring for relatives. GDP-plus would also measure changes in the quality of services by, for instance, recognizing increased longevity in estimates of health care’s output. It would also take greater account of the benefits of brand-new products and of increased choice. And, ideally, it would be sliced up to reflect the actual spending patterns of people at the top, middle and bottom of the earnings scale: poorer people tend to spend more on goods than on Harvard tuition fees.
(9) Although a big improvement on today’s measure, GDP-plus would still be an assessment of the flow of income. To provide a cross-check on a country’s prosperity, a third gauge would take stock, each decade, of its wealth. This balance-sheet would include government assets such as roads and parks as well as private wealth. Intangible capital—skills, brands, designs, scientific ideas and online networks—would all be valued. The ledger should also account for the depletion of capital: the wear-and-tear of machinery, the deterioration of roads and public spaces, and damage to the environment.
(10) Building these benchmarks will demand a revolution in national statistical agencies as bold as the one that created GDP in the first place. Even then, since so much of what people value is a matter of judgment, no reckoning can be perfect. But the current measurement of prosperity is riddled with errors and omissions. Better to embrace a new approach than to ignore the progress that pervades modern life.
In order to measure prosperity better, the author suggests all the following changes should be made EXCEPT to________.
选项
A、refine GDP as a metric of production
B、abandon the old measure
C、adopt GDP-plus in some countries first
D、introduce the balance-sheet
答案
B
解析
细节题。作者在第七至九段中提出了更好地衡量繁荣程度需要三个变化:首先,最容易的是改进作为产量标准的GDP;其次,以服务业为主导的富国应当率先开始使用一种全新的、更加广泛的年度衡量标准,这种新的衡量标准可以称之为GDP+;最后,为了对国家的繁荣程度进行交叉检查,第三种测量标准,即资产负债表,会每十年对该国的财富进行评估。它们分别对应了[A]、[C]和[D],故均排除。第七段第三句提到完全不用GDP并非答案,故[B]为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/46BK777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
PASSAGETHREEWhatcanweknowaboutthegracefulfemininestyleinVirginius’syouth?
PASSAGEONEWhatcanreducethecitizens’emotionalresponseaftertheterroristattack?
A、LivinginthecenterofLondon.B、Don’tjudgebypersonalpreferences.C、Neverlivinginabeautifulvillagehouse.D、Don’twa
A、Rogerpreferstoliveintown.B、Juliapreferstoliveinavillage.C、Rogerpreferstolivewithfamiliarneighbors.D、Julia
A、Theydon’tprefertochoosehobbiesastheirmajors.B、Theyacceptthefactthatparentsmakedecisionsforthem.C、Theyknow
A、Theyuseplasticbagsaroundthebunchestokeepthemfresh.B、TheyadoptmoderntechniquestostopthemgoingbadC、Theyuse
PASSAGEFIVE
PASSAGEFOURWhatisagooddanceaccordingtoGalili’sunderstandingofdance?
随机试题
有关Tg的描述错误的是
面色晦暗、双颊紫红、口唇轻度发绀属于面色苍白,唇舌色淡,表情疲惫属于
A.清晨B.餐前C.餐中D.餐后E.睡前阿卡波糖片的适宜服药时间是()。
使用超声波雾化吸入器,水槽内应加入
某法院经济庭审判员王某利用职务之便,收取当事人李某贿赂达万元之巨,审判活动中他即按照李某的意思故意违背事实和法律判李某一方胜诉,使对方当事人蒙受重大损失。王某构成:
关于专项施工方案的说法,以下错误的是()。
按现行会计制度及有关规定,长期负债核算的内容包括( )。
转让不动产有限产权或永久使用权,以及单位将不动产无偿赠与他人,视为()。
香港、澳门回归祖国以来,“一国两制”实践取得举世公认的成功。事实证明,“一国两制”是解决历史遗留的香港、澳门问题的最佳方案,也是香港、澳门回归后保持长期繁荣稳定的最佳制度。回归完成了香港、澳门宪制秩序的巨大转变。特别行政区的宪制基础是()
[*]①定义局部字符变量ch和字符指针变量p,并使其指向字符串s。②当p所指的字符非空时,把字符*p赋给字符ch,当字符ch不是字母’z’或者’Z’时,把字符ch的ASCII码值加1,变成其下一个字符的ASCII码,并把这个值赋给字符*p,否则,
最新回复
(
0
)