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
(1) It is easy to forget that even the most trivial commercial transactions rely on small acts of trust. Laws encourage good beh
(1) It is easy to forget that even the most trivial commercial transactions rely on small acts of trust. Laws encourage good beh
admin
2022-10-09
25
问题
(1) It is easy to forget that even the most trivial commercial transactions rely on small acts of trust. Laws encourage good behaviour, but states lack the resources to force everyone to be good all the time. Trust keeps society running. Just ordering a pizza requires faith that the dough will be well made, that the pizzeria will not abuse the customer’s credit-card information, and that the delivery man will not abscond with the cargo. More complex partnerships, of the sort that make long-run economic growth possible, require much higher degrees of trust. New technologies, from sharing-economy apps to the blockchain, offer routes around some of the trust deficits that stand in the way of growth. Yet whether such solutions to problems of mistrust build on or undermine social ties is no easy question to answer.
(2) Trust in society is not just a nicety. It makes possible, as one paper on the subject has it, "the commitment of resources to an activity where the outcome depends upon the co-operative behaviour of others". Low-trust societies waste piles of time and money working out who can be counted on, defending vulnerable stores of wealth, and guarding against con men. Such places are infertile ground for long-run investment, the gains from which could be grabbed by rivals or stolen by government. Meanwhile trust is highest, and defences against chicanery lowest, within some of the world’s wealthiest countries. Studies of the relationship between measures of trust and economic growth find a close link between the two. That does not necessarily mean one causes the other. But research also suggests that trust boosts trade, participation in financial markets and investment, suggesting that greater trust spurs the activities that make a place richer.
(3) Sadly, cultivating trust is hard. It is a sort of social capital which must be built through time and effort. Repeated positive interactions and demonstrations of trustworthiness create a foundation of mutual confidence. Within close communities, emotional cues like praise and shame effectively discourage antisocial activity. In environments rich in social capital, the return for co-operative behaviour is high; you can make more money playing by the rules and building a business, for instance, than by
reneging
on a contract at the first opportunity. In the same way, trustworthiness is rarely rewarded in low-trust societies; both high-trust and low-trust states of the world are sticky.
(4) Inventive humans are good at finding ways around trust bottlenecks. Reliance on families or tribes—groups whose members’ interests are more closely aligned, presumably, than those of the population as a whole—is a common strategy. Yet by their nature, such workarounds are limited in scope, and leave many members of society isolated. New technologies offer a more promising approach. A company’s ability to use the Internet to monitor production in a factory half a world away means that firms need not establish deep relationships with foreign suppliers before opening a distant plant. Network connections between retailers and banks can help verify a customer’s ability to pay; the blockchain, a shared, public and trusted digital of transactions, eliminates the need for a central counterparty altogether.
(5) Historically, however, technology has done more to open up society than to segregate it. New technologies make it easier to trust unfamiliar groups. Public ratings, for instance, can undercut discrimination. Taxi drivers who might normally speed past members of a different race may feel more comfortable picking up a diverse set of riders given good ratings on Uber. A survey conducted by BlaBlaCar, a popular ridesharing service, found that 88% of its members reported a high level of trust in fellow users—higher than that reported for colleagues or neighbours. In a study in America, Alberto Alesina, of Harvard University, and Eliana La Ferrara, of Bocconi University in Milan, found that places with higher levels of racial and income diversity have lower levels of trust. By arranging interactions across such boundaries, technology may widen the circle of trust.
(6) Apps often encourage good behaviour as well. Public ratings, like the ones that Uber presents for its drivers or that Yelp collects for businesses, mean that good customer service is increasingly important in capturing new business. Firms and customers that behave badly risk a permanent stain on their reputation.
(7) It is one thing to use Airbnb to rent a spare room from someone of a different background, and quite another to build the deep social bonds needed to support long-run investments. For big commitments, people will not suddenly let down their guard, however impressive technology becomes. Yet trust is a habit. New technologies that encourage co-operation in some spheres of life contribute to social capital rather than weaken it. (本文选自 The Economist)
In Para. 3, the word "reneging" probably means________.
选项
A、eating one’s word
B、making amendment
C、lying to somebody
D、jumping to conclusion
答案
A
解析
语义题。reneging出现在原文第三段倒数第二句,其前半句意思是,做生意遵守规则可以带来更多的收益,与后半句形成对比,因此可以猜测reneging的意思应该与playing by the rules相反,故A“食言”为答案。B“做出修改”、D“过早下结论”都与文义不符,故排除;C“对某人说谎”,文中reneging与contract连用,其对象并不是人,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/PDkK777K
0
专业英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Becausethewriterscommunicateverywell.B、Becausetheyarebuiltonsolidarguments.C、Becausethewritersarewidelyknown
Tomsayshewon’tforgettheday_______weworkedtogetherandtheday_______wespenttogether.
Huangjianxiang’spassionate_______madethefootballmatchbetweenItalyandAustraliaveryinteresting.
Worldfoodoutputperheadhasrisenby4percentbetweenthe1970sand1980smainly______aresultofincreasesinyieldsfro
"Howbeautifulitis",she_______atthebeautifulviewwhenshereachedthetop.
Joycewasalittle_______aboutwhetherhewouldmarryherornot.
Helentmoney,made______andencouragedotherstodolikewise.
A.acceptB.unquantifiableC.useD.whatE.purchasedF.consumedG.encouragedH.climbingI.predictablyJ.actually
WhatCausesJetLagandHowtoAvoidIt1.Facts■alongflightaffects【T1】________【T1】_________■thenatur
PASSAGEFOURWhowillbenefitmostfromtheestate-taxrepealinpractice?
随机试题
29岁女性,停经2个半月,阴道出血20天,经检查阴道后壁有紫蓝色结节,大枣大小,宫口松,子宫如孕3个月大小,血HCG大于20000U/L。应考虑为
溃疡病致瘢痕性幽门梗阻最典型的临床表现为
《中华人民共和国进出境动植物检疫法》仅适用于口岸动植物检疫。( )
张先生有500元现金。1500元活期存款。20000元定期存款,价值5000元的股票。价值20000元的汽车,价值500000元的房产。价值10000元的古董宇画。每月的生活费开销为1000元,每月需还房贷5000元,则他的失业保障月数为(
对学习内容或学习结果感兴趣而形成的动机,可称为()。
Methodsofstudyingvary;whatworks【C1】______forsomestudentsdoesn’tworkatallforothers.Theonlythingyoucandoisex
编写如下程序:PrivateSubCommand1_Click()DimxAsInteger,yAsIntegerx=10y=20Callfun1(x,y)Printx;yEnd
在下列字符中,其ASCⅡ码值最大的一个是()。
ComputerprogrammerDavidearns$40,000ayeardesigningnewcomputergames,yethecannotfindabanktolethimhaveacredit
Friedfoodshavelongbeenfrownedupon.Nevertheless,theskilletisaboutourhandiestandmostusefulpieceofkitchenequipm
最新回复
(
0
)