Only two countries in the advanced world provide no guarantee for paid leave

游客2024-03-11  3

问题    Only two countries in the advanced world provide no guarantee for paid leave from work to care for a newborn child. Last spring one of the two, Australia, gave up the dubious distinction by establishing paid family leave starting in 2011. I wasn’t surprised when this didn’ t make the news here in the United States—we’ re now the only wealthy country without such a policy.
   The United States does have one explicit family policy, the Family and Medical Leave Act, passed in 1993. It entitles workers to as much as 12 weeks’ unpaid leave for ease of a newborn or dealing with a family medical problem. Despite the modesty of the benefit, the Chamber of Commerce and other business groups fought it bitterly, describing it as "government-run personnel management" and a "dangerous precedent". In fact, every step of the way, as (usually) Democratic leaders have tried to introduce work-family balance measures into the law, business groups have been strongly opposed.
   As Yale law professor Anne Alstott argues, justifying parental support depends on defining the family as a social good that, in some sense, society must pay for. In her book No Exit: What Parents Owe Their Children and What Society Owes Parents, she argues that parents are burdened in many ways in their lives: there is "no exit" when it comes to children. "Society expects—and needs—parents to provide their children with continuity of care, meaning the intensive, intimate care that human beings need to develop their intellectual, emotional and moral capabilities. And society expects—and needs—parents to persist in their roles for 18 years, or longer if needed."
   While most parents do this out of love, there are public penalties for not providing care. What parents do, in other words, is of deep concern to the state, for the obvious reason that caring for children is not only morally urgent but essential for the future of society. The state recognizes this in the large body of family laws that govern children’ s welfare, yet parents receive little help in meeting the life-changing obligations society imposes. To classify parenting as a personal choice for which there is no collective responsibility is not merely to ignore the social benefits of good parenting; really, it is to steal those benefits because they accrue (不断积累) to the whole of society as today’ s children become tomorrow’s productive citizenry (公民). In fact, by some estimates, the value of parental investments in children, investments of time and money (including lost wages), is equal to 20-30% of gross domestic product. If these investments generate huge social benefits—as they clearly do—the benefits of providing more social support for the family should be that much clearer. [br] Why does the author object to classifying parenting as a personal choice?

选项 A、It is regarded as a legal obligation.
B、It relies largely on social support.
C、It generates huge social benefits.
D、It is basically a social undertaking.

答案 D

解析 推断题。根据题干中的classifying parenting as a personal choice可以定位到文中第四段第四句To classify parenting as a personal choice for which there is no collective responsibility is not merely to ignore the social benefits of good parenting;really,it is to steal those benefits(把父母照顾孩子的行为视为一种个人选择,并认为整个社会都不必为此负责不仅仅是忽视了父母培养子女给社会带来的利益,实际上这是窃取了这种利益),从这可以看出作者认为父母照顾孩子这种行为对整个社会有很大的益处,因为父母在为社会的未来培养具有生产力的公民。由此,推断出它是一项社会事业。A选项是事实,但是不是原因,B选项与实际情况不符,C选项是间接原因,因为养孩子有社会利益,才导致了D选项的结论,所以它才应该是社会性事业,因此,正确答案是D。
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