首页
登录
职称英语
(1)The Norwegian government just gave Lars Selhheim more than $5,000. Why di
(1)The Norwegian government just gave Lars Selhheim more than $5,000. Why di
游客
2024-11-06
42
管理
问题
(1)The Norwegian government just gave Lars Selhheim more than $5,000. Why did the 32-year-old dairy farmer need such a handout? To take his family camping, of course.
(2)That may sound crazy, but here in Norway it makes sense. Since everyone deserves an annual vacation, the government reasons, it should pay for temporary workers to milk the cows so that farmers can get away. Welfare is not bashed here but celebrated by politicians of all stripes. When a center-tight coalition took power last year from a left-leaning government, it didn’t rein in social spending. Rather, it raised pensions and advocated cash payments to parents caring for infants.
(3)Norway serves up an amazing menu of entitlements. Health care is guaranteed to everyone, and it’s free after the first $172 in personal medical costs each year. Disabled people receiving specially equipped cars and wheelchairs to get around. University education is free. Maternity leave stretches for 42 weeks at full pay. Many arthritis sufferers get an all-expense-paid trip to a spa in the Canary Islands. Sick leave can last a year at full salary. Stay-at-home parents earn a public pension. Norwegians who live above Arctic Circle get tax breaks; poets and painters get subsidies.
(4)What makes such generosity possible is North Sea petroleum. Norway is the World’s No.2 exporter of crude oil and No. 3 exporter of natural gas. Last year, those industries netted the state $12.3 billion, or about $2,800 for every citizen. Still, the welfare system is costly—anyone earning more than $36,000 a year pays the top income tax rate of 49.5 percent. Sin taxes are high too, driving up the price of a beer at an ordinary bar to $6 and the price of a pack of cigarettes to $7. Norwegians complain about waiting lists for some medical procedures, and many of the wealthy opt for private health care. Yet opinion polls show most people to be content. "There’s a general consensus that you should take care of the poorest," says Tor Hersoug of the Confederation of Norwegian Business and Industry. "We have so much money. We can afford it."
(5)The inclination to share the wealth is deeply rooted in hardscrabble farms and fishing hamlets. This is a small country(4.4 million people)more accustomed to poverty than privilege. Flaunting one’s money—the "conspicuous consumption" that the late Norwegian-American economist Thorstein Veblen condemned—is more than vulgar; it’s, well, un-Norwegian. The closest thing to a national creed is something called Jantelaw, a village maxim that warns people not to act as though they are better than anyone else. Americans familiar with the denizens of Garrison Keillor’s fictional Lake Wobegon would recognize the mentality. Here, it’s a national policy: "The philosophy is to keep the traditional equality we’ve had," says Magnhild Meltveit Kleppa, minister for social affairs.
(6)Still, there are worries in the welfare state. Some fret that Norwegians, whose idea of vacation is to rough it in unheated mountain cabins, are going soft. Single parenthood is on the rise, and conservauveness(capped by a funeral grant)erodes initiative. As a result, the Prime Minister, an ordained Lutheran Pastor who scandalized some constituents by puffing on a cigar in public, has launched a "values commission" to foster traditional mores.
(7)Then there is the fear of "oil addiction". A fall in crude prices sent Norway’s economy tumbling in the mid-80s, and the current drop in oil prices is lowering government revenues. Interest rates are up and inflation may not be far behind. So the risk-averse Norwegians are socking away most of the petroleum profits in a national rainy-day fund. Just eight years from now, Norway expects to earn more from its investments than from its oldfangled magnanimity, indefinitely. "We’re lucky in Norway." says a smiling farmer Selheim. Lucky indeed but certainly no better than anyone else. [br] The most suitable title for this passage might be _____.
选项
A、Poverty and Privilege
B、The Traditional Equality
C、The Traditional Norwegian
D、The Welfare Policy in Norway
答案
D
解析
本文虽涉及挪威特殊群体的特权、传统意义上的平等和传统的挪威人等等,但讨论的重点即文章主题是挪威的福利政策,其它都是围绕福利政策的说明和延展,显然D是正确选项。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3833244.html
相关试题推荐
(1)TheNorwegiangovernmentjustgaveLarsSelhheimmorethan$5,000.Whydi
(1)TheNorwegiangovernmentjustgaveLarsSelhheimmorethan$5,000.Whydi
Whatifthegovernmentsimplypaideveryoneenoughsothatnoonewaspo
眼下政府需要解决的就是就业问题。Employmentistheproblemthegovernmenthastosolveatpresent
政府必须防止滥用权利的现象。Thegovernmentmustpreventtheabuseofpower.分析原译,句中的care和phenom
A、Theprimaryschoolsector.B、Thecollegesector.C、Thegovernmentschoolsecto
(1)SocialmobilityintheU.K.couldbereversedunlessthegovernmentandu
(1)SocialmobilityintheU.K.couldbereversedunlessthegovernmentandu
(1)SocialmobilityintheU.K.couldbereversedunlessthegovernmentandu
(1)SocialmobilityintheU.K.couldbereversedunlessthegovernmentandu
随机试题
Westernscholarsgenerallyrecognizetwomainkindsofriddle:thedescriptiveri
国家级农业产业化龙头企业的认定标准中,对于企业经济效益的要求是企业资产负债率小于
2008届本科毕业生自主创业的风险因素中其他因素和技术水平不高所占的比重的总
与新鲜血液相比,低温储存较久的血液、血浆中的()浓度升高。
我国的法定计量单位是以()单位为基本的。A.米制 B.公制 C.国际单位制
患儿,女,6个月,人工喂养。因腹泻、呕吐2天,伴口渴、尿少半天,门诊拟诊“婴儿腹
A.蜜丸B.水丸C.片剂D.散剂E.胶囊剂贮存时应防潮、防霉变、防松碎,以纸袋、
新生儿颅内压增高的重要体征是()A.前囟隆起 B.脑膜刺激征阳性
辉辉是个腼腆害羞的孩子,平时很少说话,几乎从不发言。在今天的美术欣赏活动中,小朋
在项目前期阶段制订并执行质量管理计划的内容包括()。A.制订分层次的质量职
最新回复
(
0
)