首页
登录
职称英语
(1) Family planning has been a huge success. The global fertility rate has c
(1) Family planning has been a huge success. The global fertility rate has c
游客
2023-10-21
30
管理
问题
(1) Family planning has been a huge success. The global fertility rate has crashed, from 5.1 babies per woman in 1964 to 2.5 today. The average Bangladeshi woman can now expect to have about the same number of children as the average French woman. Only in sub-Saharan Africa are big families still in vogue, and even there they are shrinking. This is welcome. It suggests that women have gained more control over their bodies and that parents no longer reproduce frantically for fear that some of their children will die. Cutting the birth rate also leaves countries with fewer dependants per worker, at least for a time, making them better off.
(2) But this triumph conceals a growing problem. For more and more couples, the greatest source of anguish is that they have fewer children than they want, or none at all. With GlobeScan, a consultancy, The Economist polled 19 countries, asking people how many children they would like and how many they expect to have. In every rich country we surveyed, couples expect to be less fertile than they would like, and many in developing countries suffer the same sorrow. On average, Greeks think the ideal family contains 2.6 children but believe they will end up with 1.7.
(3) Medical infertility is part of the problem, not just in rich countries, where couples put off having children until it is rather late, but also in poor countries, where health care is worse. By one global estimate, at least 48m couples have been trying for a child for the past five years but have not succeeded. But the main reason for the shortfall, according to our poll, is money. From Brooklyn to Beijing, the cost of housing and education is so high that many young people say they cannot afford as many children as they want.
(4) Malthusians (马尔萨斯人口控制论者) will rejoice. The population is growing fast enough already, they will argue. Besides, can’t infertile couples just adopt children? In fact, population growth today largely reflects longer lives and will eventually go into reverse. It is not clear that there are too many people; and it is callous to ask couples who might want children to forgo that joy simply because some of their neighbours would prefer a less populous planet. And adoption, though admirable, is neither the sole responsibility of the childless nor a perfect substitute for procreation.
(5) The pain of having no or fewer children than you desire is often extreme. It can cause depression and in poor countries can be a social catastrophe. Couples impoverish themselves pursuing ineffective treatments; women who are thought to be barren are divorced, ostracised or worse. Last month a childless Kenyan tailor was charged with attempted murder, having allegedly attacked his wife with a machete.
(6) In wealthy countries, where maternity wards are quiet partly because the young are so economically insecure, governments can help by doing things they should be doing anyway: liberalising labour markets that shut the young out of jobs, relaxing planning rules to make housing cheaper and promoting child-friendly policies in the workplace. Across the world, education is important, both to warn women about how fertility declines with age and, especially in Africa, about preventable infections such as chlamydia and gonorrhoea.
(7) Most important, however, is medical innovation. In vitro fertilisation (体外受精) has become better over the years but is still horribly expensive. Some couples remortgage their homes in the hope of conceiving. Research into more frugal technology is staggeringly rare, given the demand for it. Would lower, cheaper doses of IVF drugs work as well for some people? No one knows. Will a shoe-box-sized IVF laboratory developed in America work reliably? Trials are only now under way.
(8) More money for research would help, as it generally does. But perhaps not as much as more attention. Governments and aid agencies have turned family planning into a wholly one-sided campaign, dedicated to minimising teenage pregnancies and unwanted births; it has come to mean family restriction. Instead, family planning ought to mean helping people to have as many, or as few, children as they want. (本文选自 The Economist) [br] Global birth rate shrinking indicates all the following facts EXCEPT________.
选项
A、women have gained more self-control
B、people have faith in their children’s survival
C、there will be less dependency burden per worker
D、big families only exist in sub-Saharan Africa
答案
D
解析
细节题。原文第一段介绍了出生率下降的各种表现,A、B和C均在文中有所提及,属于出生率下降、人口数量减少这一事实能够表明的问题,只有D是对文中关于撒哈拉以南非洲地区描述的曲解。本题是反选题,故排除A、B和C,选择D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3118657.html
相关试题推荐
Bythetrendofglobalization,culturalexchangesbetweenChinaandtheWest
VideoGameAddiction1.AglobalandseriousproblemAddictionoccurmorelikely
VideoGameAddiction1.AglobalandseriousproblemAddictionoccurmorelikely
VideoGameAddiction1.AglobalandseriousproblemAddictionoccurmorelikely
VideoGameAddiction1.AglobalandseriousproblemAddictionoccurmorelikely
DoyouknowJimmy?Heis______.A、toomuchthefamilymanB、toomuchofafamily
Economicglobalizationdoesnotsuggestthegovernment_______itsresponsibiliti
Maryhas______onthefamilytraditionofgivingawayplants.A、livedB、movedC、ca
Wemadeaneffortnottoleavemyfriendoutinthecoldwhenwewereplanningt
Theyaresuchabigfamilythatthisnewhouseisnot______forthemtolivein.
随机试题
Beingsociablelookslikeagoodwaytoaddyearstoyourlife.Relationship
Whentoday’scollegegraduatesgettogetherforareunionsomeday,theymay
ThefightingbetweenarmygroupsandrebelsinCongo[originaltext]Armytroo
实物量法和定额单价法在编制施工图预算方面的主要区别在于( )。A.直接工程费计
临床上常用的I类牵引属于A.颌内力 B.肌力 C.颌间力 D.颌外力 E
企业购入A材料500吨,每吨500元;B材料300吨,每吨300元。企业以现金支
某些产品因本身性质而具有一定的危险,由于生产者未用警示标志指出使用时应注意的事
以下关于中国共产党历史上的“第一”,说法错误的是:A.1920年8月,中国共产党
某期货公司因严重违法导致保证金出现缺口,中国证监会决定使用保障基金,对不能清偿的
共用题干 一般资料:求助者,男性,37岁,自考本科学历,公司职员。案例介绍:求
最新回复
(
0
)