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
The Fertility Bust A Fatting populations—the despair of state pension systems—are often regarded with calmness, even a secret s
The Fertility Bust A Fatting populations—the despair of state pension systems—are often regarded with calmness, even a secret s
admin
2012-09-10
105
问题
The Fertility Bust
A Fatting populations—the despair of state pension systems—are often regarded with calmness, even a secret satisfaction, by ordinary people. Europeans no Longer need Large families to gather the harvest or to took after parents. They have used their good fortune to have fewer children, thinking this wilt make their tires better. Much of Europe is too crowded as it is. !s this at that is going on? Germans have been agonising about recent European Union estimates suggesting that 30% of German women are, and will remain, childless. The number is a guess: Germany does not collect figures Like this. Even if the share is 25%, as other surveys suggest, it is by far the highest in Europe.
B Germany is something of an oddity in this. In most countries with tow fertility, young women have their first child late, and stop at one. In Germany, women with children often have two or three, but many have none at all. Germany is also odd in experiencing low fertility for such a tong time. Europe is demographically potarised. Countries in the north and west saw fertility fart early, in the 196Os. Recently, they have seen it stabilise or rise back towards replacement [ever (i.e. 2.1 births per woman). Countries in the south and east, on the other hand, saw fertility rates fart much faster, more recently (often to below 1.3, a rate at which the population falls by half every 45 years). Germany combines both. Its fertility rate felt below 2 in 1971. However, it has stayed tow and is stilt only just above 1.3. This challenges the notion that European fertility is likely to stabilise at tolerable Levels. It raises questions about whether the Low birth rates of Italy and Poland, say, realty are, as some have argued, merely temporary.
C The List of explanations for why German fertility has not rebounded is tong. Michael Teitelbaum, a demographer at the Stoan Foundation in New York ticks them off: poor child care; unusually extended higher education; inflexible labour taws; high youth unemployment; and non-economic or cultural factors. One German writer, Gunter Grass, wrote a novel, "Headbirths", in 1982, about Harm and Dōrte Peters, "a model couple" who disport themselves on the beaches of Asia rather than invest time and trouble in bringing up a baby. "They keep a cat", writes Mr Grass, "and stilt have no child." The novel is subtitled "The Germans are dying out". With the exception of this cultural factor, none of these features is peculiar to Germany. If social and economic explanations account for persistent low fertility there, then they may well produce the same persistence elsewhere.
D The reason for hoping otherwise is that the initiat dectine in southern and eastern Europe was drastic, and may be reversibte. In the Mediterranean, demographic decline was associated with freeing young women from the constraints of traditional Catholicism, which encouraged large families. In eastern Europe, it was associated with the collapse in living standards and the ending of pro-birth policies after the fait of communism. In both regions, as such temporary factors fade, fertility rates might, in principle, be expected to rise. Indeed, they may already be stabilising in Italy and Spain. Germany tells you that reversing these trends can be hard. There, and elsewhere, fertility rates did not merely fall; they went below what people said they wanted. In 1979, Eurobarometer asked Europeans how many children they would tike. Almost everywhere, the answer was two: the traditional two-child idea[ persisted even when people were not delivering it. This may have reflected old habits of mind. Or people may reat[y be having fewer children than they claim to want.
E A recent paper suggests how this might come about. If women postpone their first child past their mid-30s, it may be too [ate to have a second even if they want one (the average age of first births in most of Europe is now 30). If everyone does the same, one child becomes the norm: a one-child policy by example rather than coercion, as it were. If women wait to start a family unlit they are established at work, they may end up postponing children longer than they might otherwise have chosen. When birth rates began to fait in Europe, this was said to be a simple matter of choice. That was true, but it is possible that fertility may overshoot below what people might naturally have chosen. For many years, politicians have argued that southern Europe will catch up from its fertility decline because women, having postponed their first child, will quickly have a second and third. The overshoot theory suggests there may be only partial recuperation. Postponement could permanently tower fertility, not just redistribute it across time.
F There is a twist. If people have fewer children than they claim to want, how they see the family may change too. Research by Tomas Sobotka of the Vienna Institute of Demography suggests that, after decades of tow fertility, a quarter of young German men and a fifth of young women say they have no intention of having children and think that this is fine. When Eurobarometer repeated its poll about ideal family size in 2001, support for the two-chlid model had fallen everywhere. Parts of Europe, then, may be entering a new demographic trap. People restrict family size from choice. Social, economic and cultural factors then cause this natural fertility decline to overshoot. This changes expectations, to which people respond by having even fewer children. That does not necessarily mean that birth rates will fait even more: there may yet be some natural floor, but it could mean that recovery from very low fertility rates proves to be stow or even non-existent.
Questions 23-26
According to the information given in the text, choose the correct answer or answers from the choices given.
选项
A、less labour is needed to farm land.
B、the feeling that Europe is too crowded.
C、a general dislike of children.
答案
AB
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/LINO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
ThemedianscorefortheclassisIfthemeanscoreforthejuniorswereknown,whichofthefollowingcouldbecalculatedfrom
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
EachofQuestions1to7presentstwoquantities.QuantityAandQuantityB.Comparethetwoquantities.Youmayuseadditional
A、Thesurplusgeneratedbylow-pressuresystemscanbesold,lesseningoverallwaterstrainonaregion.B、Low-pressuresystems
A、aco-evolutionaryargumentisunnecessarytoestablishingthatrain-forestadaptationistheeffectofhumaninterventionB、pl
A、The"slingeffect"remainsunprovenandrequiresexperimentalcorroboration.B、Thedegreetowhichdropletscollideistheonl
Thedriverwasexcessively______,constantlyapologizingforthecar’spoorsuspension,theheat,thestateoftheroads,andth
A、CautiousbutpositiveB、ApprehensiveandadmonitoryC、NeitherconcernednoroptimisticD、AlarmedandantagonisticE、Disinteres
Thoughfeministinitsimplications,YvonneRainers1974film______thefilmmaker’sactiveinvolvementinfeministpolitics.
随机试题
女性,76岁。因反复晕厥伴抽搐半天入院,既往有高血压病史20年。查体:血压200/50mmHg,心率慢,律齐。心尖部第一心音强弱不等,心底部有Ⅱ级喷射样收缩期杂音。此患者反复晕厥,抽搐的原因可能是
金属键既有饱和性又有方向性。()
某固定资产原值为4万元,预计净残值为1000元,使用年限为5年。若采用年数总和法计提折旧,则第3年应提折旧额为()。
盾构现场的平面布置设施包括( )。
外国甲公司2015年为中国乙公司提供内部控制咨询服务,为此在乙公司所在市区租赁一办公场所,具体业务情况如下:(1)1月6日,甲公司与乙公司签订服务合同,确定内部控制咨询服务具体内容,合同约定服务期限为8个月,服务收费为人民币600万元(含增值税),所
()是指服务人员的知识、友好的态度以及激发顾客对企业的信心和信任感的能力。
在学习过程中有效地培养学生内部学习动机,实质上就是要培养那些能直接转化的内部学习动机的有关心理因素,如培养学生的学习热情、学习的责任心和好胜心。()
在计算机中,信息的最小单位是
A、Introducethewomantohisfriends.B、Getfamiliarwiththeuniversitycampus.C、Gotothetenniscourtsforanappointment.D
A、Gofishing.B、Entertainathome.C、Workathome.D、Havearest.A
最新回复
(
0
)