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
Save the Post Office From Extinction A) Go to the post office, send a package, pick up some stamps and deposit your paycheck
Save the Post Office From Extinction A) Go to the post office, send a package, pick up some stamps and deposit your paycheck
admin
2022-08-28
26
问题
Save the Post Office From Extinction
A) Go to the post office, send a package, pick up some stamps and deposit your paycheck or pay a bill? That’s the newest idea for rescuing the cash-strapped (资金紧缺的) United States Postal Service (USPS) floated in a report published by the USPS Office of Inspector General (OIG).
B) "One in four U.S. households lives at least partially outside the financial mainstream," it says. The FDIC (联邦储蓄保险公司) puts the number of entirely unbanked Americans at about 8%. Exclusion from the financial mainstream isn’t cheap: "The average underserved household spends $2,412 each year just on interest and fees for alternative financial services," the OIG says. It estimates it could turn a profit by offering basic services like check-cashing, bill pay, small-dollar loans and the like at a fraction of the prices charged by fringe providers.
C) The report points out that more than 90% of bank branches closed since 2008 are in lower-income towns and neighborhoods. Post offices, on the other hand, are in both rich and poor areas. The plan has already drawn early praise from some on the political left. On its website, the Center for American Progress, hails the idea, saying it "could spare the most economically vulnerable Americans from dealing with predatory (贪婪的,掠夺的) financial companies."
D) "If the Postal Service offered basic banking services—nothing fancy, just basic bill paying, check cashing and small dollar loans—then it could provide affordable financial services for underserved families, and, at the same time, shore up (支持,支撑) its own financial status," Senator Elizabeth Warren argues. "USPS could partner with banks to make a critical difference for millions of Americans who don’t have basic banking services because there are almost no banks or bank branches in their neighborhoods."
E) "Banks don’t want these customers; if they did, they would actually make a play for their business," an article in the New Republic argues, "Instead of partnering with predatory lenders, banks could partner with the USPS on a public option, not beholden (欠人情的) to shareholder demands, which would treat customers more fairly." It’s this "partnering with banks" thing where the details get tricky. Although the OIG report says it’s not out to replace banks, banks—perhaps not surprisingly—don’t feel quite the same way. Banks might not be raking in money in poor neighborhoods, but that doesn’t mean they’re happy about the Post Office filling in the gaps.
F) A representative of the American Bankers Association tells the Washington Post, "We’re deeply concerned that the U.S. Postal Service is trying to drive the creation of a new government-sponsored entity engaged in banking services, which is not subject to the same level of regulation. This new entity could be viewed by many as a government-endorsed provider of financial products," he says.
G) Bloomberg Businessweek points out that plenty of non-banks, including Wal-Mart and T-Mobile, offer bank-like services via prepaid debit cards (预付借记卡), and it suggests that the future of banking services, especially at the lower end of the income spectrum, increasingly lies with businesses (or entities) that aren’t banks themselves. "I perceive banks as becoming increasingly good at commercial banking and increasingly bad at retail banking," Arjan Schutte, founder of Core Innovation Capital, tells the publication. "Just from an economic perspective, there are better places than banks."
H) To experts who study the postal service, there are some questions: Can the post office really make money from this? And—should it? How should it balance revenue generation with some sort of civic duty?
I) For starters, if serving low-income Americans with financial services is such a good way to make money, why aren’t banks already doing it? It’s a good question, and there are a couple of (related) reasons: Banking regulations require that when a bank sets up shop, it can’t just take residents’ money for deposit and not also offer lending services (like, say, mortgages). Some banks, especially after the subprime crisis and real estate bubble bursting, are reluctant to lend under these conditions, so they stay out of these areas entirely.
J) The Post Office, on the other hand, has a huge, well-known network of facilities, already established, staffed and paid for. "It could be that the Postal Service has a bigger retail network than the banks and could make use of that," says James Campbell, a consultant on postal policy. "It doesn’t sound crazy, but it doesn’t sound like a big moneymaker, either."
K) Campbell is also skeptical of the plan because it doesn’t address the post office’s biggest problem: a sharp decline in first-class mail (第一类邮件) volume. But the Post Service has been tackling that slump in other ways, argues Mark T. Williams, a former bank examiner for the Federal Reserve who teaches banking at Boston University, who compares the banking plan to other recent private-sector initiatives the Post Office has undertaken, like its partnership with Amazon.com. "This is a really entrepreneurial and aggressive thing they’re doing," he says.
L) He points out (as the OIG does in its report) that a number of other countries offer financial services through their postal agencies and make money doing so. "I think this is a good time for them to continue to recreate who they are," Williams says. "They have great locations to serve this population. I think this would be a very positive step for them."
M) Success might not come without cost or risk, though. Given that the Postal Office is still losing billions of dollars, Rick Geddes, an associate professor of policy analysis and management at Cornell University, thinks this is a risky time to set off in a new direction. "Would this be an additional drain or could the Postal Service do this in a way that would make it profitable?" he says. "I’m often supportive of the Postal Service innovating and trying new products and services that are in its areas of expertise," he says. "I would have a real question about where is the core expertise to do bill paying and check cashing."
N) In fact, even defining success in this case could prove tricky. "What exactly is the goal?" Geddes says. "Is the goal to make the Postal Service more efficient, more like a utility, more profitable, or is the goal to address this fundamental problem of poor communities not having adequate banking?"
O) From the OIG report, it’s clear that the Postal Service thinks the answer is one that melds both profitability and public service. Although it preaches the revenue-generating possibilities of financial services offered by other countries’ postal agencies, it argues that the benefits of entering the market would be social as well as financial. Williams thinks the two goals aren’t mutually exclusive. "I’d argue the USPS would bring competition to these folks that have been able to prey on the underserved, so that’s a real positive," he says.
By providing basic banking services, the Postal Service could help underserved families as well as its own financial status.
选项
答案
D
解析
题干意为,美国邮政通过提供基本银行服务,既有利于欠缺金融服务的家庭,又有利于自己的金融地位。根据题干中的关键词basic banking services,underserved families和its own financial status可定位到D段。该段首句提到,如果邮局提供基本的银行服务,那么既可以为欠缺金融服务的家庭提供负担得起的金融服务,又支撑住了自己的金融地位。由此可知,题干是对原文的同义转述,故选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/xKx7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Toplaytheviolinonceagain.B、TogototheUnitedStates.C、Toapplyforascholarship.D、Tohaveherperformancetaped.D根
A、Tosuggestandassistchildren’splay.B、Togivechildrenopportunitiestoplay.C、Tomakechildrenexcited.D、Topreventchil
A、Theyhaveashortmemory.B、Theyhavenotime.C、Theyareunknowledgeable.D、Theyhavelanguageinterference.D
A、Specialeducation.B、Biomedicalengineering.C、Artificialintelligence.D、Theimagingsystem.B
A、MostadvertisementsonTVarecheatingconsumers.B、WatchingTVcostsusmuchmoney.C、Peoplespendtoomuchtimewatchinguse
A、MostadvertisementsonTVarecheatingconsumers.B、WatchingTVcostsusmuchmoney.C、Peoplespendtoomuchtimewatchinguse
A、Itisveryexplosiveinsocialterms.B、Itshouldbeauniversallawforallcountries.C、Itshouldconsidertheactualsituat
A、BecauseheusedtoliveinFrance.B、BecausehelikeschattingwithFrenchpeople.C、BecausehestudiesFrenchatschool.D、Be
A、Theycouldworktogetherwiththewhite.B、Theirchildrenstudiedinthesameschoolsasthewhite’s.C、Theysharedthesamep
A、TheUniversityfaculty.B、TheStudentAssociation.C、TheAlumniAssociation.D、ThePresidentoffice.C女士说组织该活动的是校友联合会,故选C。听到什么
随机试题
深层搅拌法适用于处理正常固结的淤泥和淤泥质土、饱和黄土、素填土、黏性土以及()等地基,对于泥炭土、有机质土、塑性指数大于25的黏土、地下水有腐蚀性的地区,必须通过现场试验确定其适用性。
男性,25岁,火焰烧伤总面积约2%。神志淡漠,四肢软弱,皮肤苍白。脉搏59次/分,血压12/8kPa(90/60mmHg),尿量少于20ml/h。心电图上QRS增宽、PR间期延长、T波高而尖女性,24岁,被沸水烧伤总面积达60%。脉细,脉搏114次/分
与变形杆菌OXk有交叉抗原的是
太阳病,发汗未愈,风寒入里化热,身热不解,汗出而喘,舌苔薄白,脉滑数者,治疗应选用
在大体积混凝土施工中,不宜选用()水泥。
根据《水利工程建设重大质量与安全事故应急预案》,工级水利工程建设质量与安全事故为已经或者可能导致死亡(含失踪)()人以上,或直接经济损失1亿元以上的事故。
下列不属于建设单位办理工程质量监督备案手续所要提供的文件和资料是()。
美国中长期国债的付息期一般为()。
在当代中国,法律对经济关系的调整模式是()。
甲医院为乙的直肠癌作切除手术,因重大过失遗留一块纱布于乙的体内。经查,手术前乙同意甲医院的规定:“对于任何事故,医院概不负责。”试问:(1)乙对甲有无损害赔偿请求权?(2)如有,应为何种请求权?为什么?
最新回复
(
0
)