
六级阅读新题型匹配(1).docx
12页六级阅读新题型之段落匹配题Section B Directions: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.Into the UnknownThe world has never seen population ageing before. Can it cope?[A] Until the early 1990s nobody much thought about whole populations getting older. The UN had the foresight to convene a “world assembly on ageing” back in 1982, but that came and went. By 1994 the World Bank had noticed that something big was happening. In a report entitled “Averting the Old Age Crisis”, it argued that pension arrangements in most countries were unsustainable.[F] Younger people today mostly accept that they will have to work for longer and that their pensions will be less generous. Employers still need to be persuaded that older workers are worth holding on to. That may be because they have had plenty of younger ones to choose from, partly thanks to the post-war baby boom and partly because over the past few decades many more women have entered the labor force, increasing employers’ choice. But the reservoir of women able and willing to take up paid work is running low, and the baby-boomers are going grey.[G] In many countries immigrants have been filling such gaps in the labor force as have already emerged (and remember that the real shortage is still around ten years off). Immigration in the developed world is the highest it has ever been, and it is making a useful difference. In still-fertile America it currently accounts for about 40% of total population growth, and in fast-ageing Western Europe for about 90%.[K] Nor is there any sign of the intergenerational warfare predicted in the 1990s. After all, older people themselves mostly have families. In a recent study of parents and grown-up children in 11 European countries, Karsten Hank of Mannheim University found that 85% of them lived within 25km of each other and the majority of them were in touch at least once a week.[L] Even so, the shift in the center of gravity to older age groups is bound to have a profound effect on societies, not just economically and politically but in all sorts of other ways too. Richard Jackson and Neil Howe of America’s CSIS, in a thoughtful book called The Graying of the Great Powers, argue that, among other things, the ageing of the developed countries will have a number of serious security implications.Ask me in 2020[N] There is little that can be done to stop population ageing, so the world will have to live with it. But some of the consequences can be alleviated. Many experts now believe that given the right policies, the effects, though grave, need not be catastrophic. Most countries have recognized the need to do something and are beginning to act.[O] But even then there is no guarantee that their efforts will work. What is happening now is historically unprecedented. Ronald Lee, director of the Centre on the Economics and Demography of Ageing at the University of California, Berkeley, puts it briefly and clearly: “We don’t really know what population ageing will be like, because nobody has done it yet.”注意:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
F 46. Employers should realize it is important to keep older workers in the workforce.K 47. A recent study found that most old people in some European countries had regular weekly contact with their adult children.D 48. Few governments in rich countries have launched bold大胆的 reforms to tackle the problem of population ageing.A 49. In a report published some 20 years ago, the sustainability of old-age pension systems in most countries was called into doubt.M 50. Countries that have a shortage of young adults will be less willing to send them to war.B 52. A series of books, mostly authored by Americans, warned of conflicts between the older and younger generations.E 54. The best solution to the pension crisis is to postpone延迟 the retirement age.H 55. Immigration as a means to boost the shrinking labor force may meet with resistance in some rich countries.模拟试题一Bosses Say ‘Yes ’ to Home Work[F] Technology advances, including the widespread availability of broadband, are making the introduction of remote working a piece of cake.[G] “If systems are set up properly, staff can have access to all the resources they have in the office wherever they have an internet connection,” says Andy Poulton, e-business advisor at Business Link for Berkshire and Wiltshire. “There are some very exciting developments which have enabled this.”[H] One is the availability of broadband everywhere, which now covers almost all of the country (BT claims that, by July, 99.8% of 。












