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) Innovation, the elixir of progress, has always cost people their jobs. In the Industrial Revolution artis
PASSAGE THREE (1) Innovation, the elixir of progress, has always cost people their jobs. In the Industrial Revolution artis
admin
2022-08-27
78
问题
PASSAGE THREE
(1) Innovation, the elixir of progress, has always cost people their jobs. In the Industrial Revolution artisan weavers were swept aside by the mechanical loom. Over the past 30 years the digital revolution has displaced many of the mid-skill jobs that underpinned 20th-century middle-class life. Typists, ticket agents, bank tellers and many production-line jobs have been dispensed with, just as the weavers were.
(2) For those who believe that technological progress has made the world a better place, such churn is a natural part of rising prosperity. Although innovation kills some jobs, it creates new and better ones, as a more productive society becomes richer and its wealthier inhabitants demand more goods and services. Optimism remains the right starting-point, but for workers the dislocating effects of technology may make themselves evident faster than its benefits. Even if new jobs and wonderful products emerge, in the short term income gaps will widen, causing huge social dislocation and perhaps even changing politics.
(3) Why be worried? It is partly just a matter of history repeating itself. In the early part of the Industrial Revolution the rewards of increasing productivity went disproportionately to capital; later on, labor reaped most of the benefits. The pattern today is similar. The prosperity unleashed by the digital revolution has gone overwhelmingly to the owners of capital and the highest-skilled workers. Over the past three decades, labor’s share of output has shrunk globally from 64% to 59%. Meanwhile, the share of income going to the top 1% in America has risen from around 9% in the 1970s to 22% today. Unemployment is at alarming levels in much of the rich world, and not just for cyclical reasons. Fifteen years ago, 65% of working-age Americans were in work; since then the proportion has fallen, during good years as well as bad, to the current level of 59%.
(4) Worse, it seems likely that this wave of technological disruption to the job market has only just started. From driverless cars to clever household gadgets, innovations that already exist could destroy swathes of jobs that have hitherto been untouched. The public sector is one obvious target: it has proved singularly resistant to tech-driven reinvention. But the step change in what computers can do will have a powerful effect on middle-class jobs in the private sector too.
(5) Until now the jobs most vulnerable to machines were those that involved routine, repetitive tasks. But thanks to the exponential rise in processing power and the ubiquity of digitised information ("big data"), computers are increasingly able to perform complicated tasks more cheaply and effectively than people. Clever industrial robots can quickly "learn" a set of human actions. Services may be even more vulnerable. Computers can already detect intruders in a closed-circuit camera picture more reliably than a human can. By comparing reams of financial or biometric data, they can often diagnose fraud or illness more accurately than any number of accountants or doctors.
(6) At the same time, the digital revolution is transforming the process of innovation itself. Thanks to off-the-shelf code from the internet and platforms that host services (such as Amazon’s cloud computing), provide distribution (Apple’s app store) and offer marketing (Facebook), the number of digital startups has exploded. Just as computer-games designers invented a product that humanity never knew it needed but now cannot do without, so these firms will no doubt dream up new goods and services to employ millions. But for now they are singularly light on workers. When Instagram, a popular photo-sharing site, was sold to Facebook for about $1 billion in 2012, it had 30 million customers and employed 13 people. Kodak, which filed for bankruptcy a few months earlier, employed 145,000 people in its heyday.
(7) The problem is one of timing as much as anything. Google now employs 46,000 people. But it takes years for new industries to grow, whereas the disruption a startup causes to incumbents is felt sooner. Airbnb may turn homeowners with spare rooms into entrepreneurs, but it poses a direct threat to the lower end of the hotel business—a massive employer.
(8) If this analysis is halfway correct, the social effects will be huge. Many of the jobs most at risk are lower down the ladder (logistics, haulage), whereas the skills that are least vulnerable to automation (creativity, managerial expertise) tend to be higher up, so median wages are likely to remain stagnant for some time and income gaps are likely to widen.
(9) Anger about rising inequality is bound to grow, but politicians will find it hard to address the problem. Shunning progress would be as futile now as the Luddites’ protests against mechanised looms were in the 1810s, because any country that tried to stop would be left behind by competitors eager to embrace new technology. The freedom to raise taxes on the rich to punitive levels will be similarly constrained by the mobility of capital and highly skilled labour.
(10) The main way in which governments can help their people through this dislocation is through education systems. One of the reasons for the improvement in workers’ fortunes in the latter part of the Industrial Revolution was because schools were built to educate them—a dramatic change at the time. Now those schools themselves need to be changed, to foster the creativity that humans will need to set them a-part from computers. There should be less rote-learning and more critical thinking. Technology itself will help, whether through MOOCs (massive open online courses) or even video games that simulate the skills needed for work.
(11) Yet however well people are taught, their abilities will remain unequal, and in a world which is increasingly polarised economically, many will find their job prospects dimmed and wages squeezed. The best way of helping them is not, as many on the left seem to think, to push up minimum wages. Jacking up the floor too far would accelerate the shift from human workers to computers. Better to top up low wages with public money so that anyone who works has a reasonable income, through a bold expansion of the tax credits that countries such as America and Britain use.
(12) Innovation has brought great benefits to humanity. Nobody in their right mind would want to return to the world of handloom weavers. But the benefits of technological progress are unevenly distributed, especially in the early stages of each new wave, and it is up to governments to spread them. In the 19th century it took the threat of revolution to bring about progressive reforms. Today’s governments would do well to start making the changes needed before their people get angry.
The following are the potential effect of digital revolution EXCEPT that ______.
选项
A、the power of government will be undermined
B、the number of digital startups will rise dramatically
C、a great number of today’s jobs will be automated
D、the inequality in wealth distribution will be reinforced
答案
A
解析
根据题目中的potential effect of distal revolution定位到第5、6和8段。题目问不属于数字革命带来的潜在影响,选项A“政府的权利将被削弱”没有原文依据,相关信息出段在第9段,但该段第2句只是提到政府可能难以解决这个问题,但并没有涉及政府权利,故答案为A。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/A2jJ777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Onereasonthattheeconomyofthecountryisdoingsowellisthatpeoplenowhavemorediscretionaryfundsattheir________.
Surprisingly,thenation’shighrateofunemploymenthasonlyaffected________stockpricesinthetechnologymarketsofar.
每到暑期的八九月份,雪片似的大学录取通知书就会从全国各个大学飞出,成百万的飞,飞往城市,飞往乡村,飞到_____。这些大学录取通知书,哪怕是重点大学的,除了被录取的考生外,在社会上已经引不起什么动荡与波澜,因为它已经_____了。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项
Paddyisinterestedinthesportsprogrammebecause
PASSAGETHREE(1)Thishasbeenquiteaweekforliterarycoups.Inanalmostentirelyunexpectedmove,theSwedishAcademy
(1)ThelibraryatWoodgrovePrimarySchoolhasbeenturnedintoa"Maker-Space".Afterregularlessonsendataround2p.m.,pu
(1)Manymodernurbanareashavebeenbuiltaroundcars,withhugeamountsofspacesetasideforroadsandparking.Butwhatha
FiveCommonMistakesinConversationsandTheirSolutionsI.NotlisteningA.Problem:mostpeople【T1】______
A——groceryJ——furnitureshopB——roastmeatshopK——electricalapplianceshopC——foodanddrinkshop
A、Highsalaries.B、Longholidays.C、Interestingcolleagues.D、Gooddirectors.B对话最后,男士问女士有没有长假期,女士回答没有并说那是她最想要的。由此可知,女士在工作方面最想要的
随机试题
简述社区基本卫生服务任务中社区医疗的具体内容。
原发性甲状腺功能亢进病人可能出现的临床表现有【】
麻醉引起的循环系统并发症不包括
用于治疗动物慢性心功能不全的慢作用强心苷类药物是
下列哪种情形下不能收回国有土地使用卡义?()
甲、乙合谋勒索丙的钱财。甲与丙及丙的儿子丁(17岁)相识。某日下午,甲将丁邀到一家游乐场游玩,然后由乙向丙打电话。乙称丁被绑架,令丙赶快送3万元现金到约定地点,不许报警,否则杀害丁。丙担心儿子的生命而没有报警,下午7点左右准备了3万元后送往约定地点。乙取得
2012年甲基金会共收到捐赠款380万元,其中的180万元甲基金会可以自由支配,剩余款项必须用于资助贫困地区的儿童教育,当年甲基金会将150万元转赠给某贫困地区的数所小学,假设不考虑期初余额的影响,2012年年末该基金会的限定性净资产为()万元。
有关广告表现,下列说法不正确的是()。
在产品认证标志上显示“CONVERSIONTOORGANIC”指的是_________。
(清华大学2008年试题)ThechangesingloballyaveragedtemperaturethathaveoccurredattheEarth’ssurfaceoverthepastcenturya
最新回复
(
0
)