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
I used to boast that Britain was a relatively uncorrupt society. Look at France, I would say, where a high proportion of recent
I used to boast that Britain was a relatively uncorrupt society. Look at France, I would say, where a high proportion of recent
admin
2014-09-09
52
问题
I used to boast that Britain was a relatively uncorrupt society. Look at France, I would say, where a high proportion of recent presidents and prime ministers had faced criminal charges after leaving office. Or Italy, where the tentacles of the Mafia reached deeply into civil society. Or Greece, where it was a point of honour not to pay taxes. What explained our supposed immunity? Perhaps it was a result of our Protestant inheritance. And from that had also come the less tribal nature of our society than many others. For tribal loyalties can sometimes rank ahead of obeying the law.
I was, of course, wrong. Long ago, the claim could have been justified. But not any longer. There are too many examples of corrupt behaviour; they seem to come to the surface on a daily basis. We can make a quick list. Members of Parliament who abused their system of expenses and, in some cases, submitted false claims. National newspapers where, since 1999, 90 people have been arrested in conjunction with illegal acquisition of confidential information. Of these, 80 were arrested since police investigations were renewed in 2011, and, of these, 15 have been formally charged with crimes. Two more journalists and a serving policeman were arrested yesterday.
Or look at the drug companies. The British multinational GlaxoSmithKline was recently fined £l. 9bn for bad practices in the US. The company cheerfully marketed its drug Wellbutrin for the treatment of conditions for which it had not been approved. It spent millions of dollars to persuade doctors to speak at meetings, sometimes at lavish resorts, at which the non-authorised uses of Wellbutrin were routinely promoted, and Glaxo also used sham advisory boards to promote the drug. Glaxo is not alone. According to the WHO, unethical practices such as bribery, falsification of evidence, and mismanagement of conflicts of interest are "common throughout the medicine chain".
We cannot leave out British banks. Some of them have been implicated in the practice of falsifying one of the key interest rates in the financial markets, the so-called Libor(or London Inter-Bank Offered Rate). The Serious Fraud Office has stated that it is "considering whether it is both appropriate and possible to bring criminal prosecutions". Then, more recently, the fraudulent behaviour of the police following the Hillsborough disaster has dominated the headlines. Criminal charges are being considered.
I have listed only those cases where the courts are involved, either resulting in conviction(four MPs), or awaiting judgment(journalists)or where the authorities are contemplating bringing charges. Consider the range this legal activity covers, from bankers to politicians, from business executives to constables. Where has this corruption come from? In distant times, corruption was mainly confined to contracts where bribes were sometimes paid to land jobs. Town hall officials were sometimes implicated. Now corruption seems to be penetrating all levels of society. What explains it?
In fact, different explanations are needed. The banks and the drug companies can be grouped together as large companies operating all over the world. MPs and police officers are in a very different situation. They both alike work in small, closed societies where bad practices can easily flourish. As Robert Chesshyre noted of the police in these pages last Saturday: "the instinct…is to close ranks and regard criticism as calumny". Exactly the same observation could be made about MPs.
Professor David Beetham has produced for Democratic Audit the best analysis I have seen of corruption in the world of multinational companies. He puts in first place what he calls the triumph of market fundamentalism in the Anglo-Saxon world since the 1980s; the idea that unfettered markets constitute a self-regulating and self-correcting device to maximise efficiency and economic growth. This led to major programmes of business and financial deregulations in the US and Britain. I would prefer to say that a large volume of poorly designed regulation was swept away but there remained a need to act against the strong collusive instincts of business executives. They don’ t actually like competition and will always try to limit it or control it. But right-wing governments left the door open to market fixing.
A second factor is globalisation, which, like deregulation, isn’t intrinsically bad. But the movement of work from advanced economies to less developed ones, where wages may be low, corporation taxes lighter and social security costs minimal, has the consequence of diminishing the power of the governments in First World countries relative to private markets and firms. Then there is the ability of financial trading businesses to move out of places like London and New York to low-tax zones, leaving national governments vulnerable to threats of transferring valuable business overseas if regulation becomes onerous. These are some of the explanations for the march of corruption. But there is little sign that action is being taken by governments to reverse the trend. I don’t expect to make my old boast again any time soon.
One of the author’s main purposes in writing this article is______.
选项
A、to expose and explain how corrupt Britain has become
B、to criticize himself for misunderstanding the British society
C、to offer suggestions on how to eliminate corruption in Britain
D、to compare Britain with France, Italy and Greece in terms of corruption
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/hHSO777K
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
Itneveroccurredtohimthatheandhisdoingwerenotofthemostintenseandfascinatinginteresttoanyonewithwhomhecame
TidinessTidinessmeanskeepingthingsoutofsightandyetavailablewhenwanted.Itimpliesthatthereisa【C1】________for
TidinessTidinessmeanskeepingthingsoutofsightandyetavailablewhenwanted.Itimpliesthatthereisa【C1】________for
Johnisreluctanttotakethefinalsteptosolvethisproblem,becauseheknowsclearlythatitmeanstheirrevocablebreaking
Thecentralgovernmenthopestocurtailmilitaryspendinginthenextyear.
Whenonehasgoodhealth,________shouldfeelfortunate.
Itwasaone-linechatreplyfromanAncestryDNAcustomer-servicerepthatrippedCatherineSt.Clair’slife.At57,shewasher
主席先生,女士们、先生们:目前,国际形势正处于深刻变化之中。和平与发展仍然是当今时代的主题,总体和平的国际环境为世界经济发展提供了有利条件;科技进步日新月异并孕育着新的重大突破,前所未有地提高了人类认识、把握宏观和微观世界的能力,展现了新的发展
WhenIwasgrowingup,Iwasonlyoccasionallyexposedtothecriminalclasses.Andeventhenitwasmostlyinaharmless,almos
A、Thehotelisafavoritehauntformoviestars.B、Thehotelislocatedonafrozenriver.C、Thehotelisrebuilteveryyear.D、
随机试题
肾功能不良时,用药时需要减少剂量的是:
女性,28岁,平时月经规律,此次停经50天,行人工流产术,术中见绒毛,术后至今已经3周余,阴道仍然淋漓出血。4年前侵蚀性葡萄胎行化疗,妇科检查:子宫丰满,前壁凸出,质软无压痛,活动好。彩色B超示:前壁肌层有局限丰富血流信号,宫腔内未见有占位病灶。为明
【背景资料】某新建单线铁路站前工程第二标段的工程范围包括:线下工程起讫里程为DK43+000~DK60+500;铺架起讫里程为DK43+000~DK198+F500。线下工程平面示意图如图2所示。新建线路自既有车站引出后与既有进港线交叉,施工时需
下列不属于经常修理费的是()
长江公司生产和销售甲产品,相关资料如下:(1)目前的信用政策为“2/15,n/30”,有占销售额60%的客户在折扣期内付款并享受公司提供的折扣;不享受折扣的销售额中,有80%可以在信用期内收回,另外20%在信用期满后10天(平均数)收回。目前的销售收入为
某公司准备向不特定对象发行证券,下列发行计划必须由承销团承销的是()。
劳动者在用人单位连续工作满()的,劳动者提出续订劳动合同,除劳动者提出订立固定期限劳动合同外,应当订立无固定期限劳动合同。
地球上的淡水资源在全球水量中所占比例极小,而且目前全球超过半数的淡水资源以——的形式存在,尚未被开发利用。
如果市场利率低于债券票面利率,则债券价格()债券面值。[上海财经大学2011研]
Overthepastdecade,theUSpopulationgrewattheslowestratesincethe1930s,theCensusBureausaidMonday,aremarkable
最新回复
(
0
)