Work looks a better cure for poverty than welfare Especially as fewer and fewer countries will be able to afford to pay potential workers to stay at home a Victorian idea is back in favour: many poor people are better off when they are pulled back into the labour market. The idea revived first in the United States. There, in its harshest form, the unemployed work in exchange for welfare. But countries with governments to the left of America’s, including Labour Australia and Socialist France, are now also exploring ways to link income support and employment policy.
Coming from different directions, the right and the left are gradually finding new common ground. For the right, it seems deplorable to encourage the poor to rely on the state for cash, because they get hooked on government help and accustomed to being poor. For the left, it seems deplorable to allow workers to drop out of the job market for long periods, because it makes it harder for them to find new jobs. For both, the answer is to get the poor to work.
Most industrial countries have a two-tier system of social protection: a social-security scheme, where workers and their bosses make regular contributions in exchange for payments to workers when they are unemployed, sick or retired; and a safety-net, to give some income to those poor people who have exhausted their social insurance or who have none The former is usually not means-tested but, for the unemployed, is of limited duration; the latter is almost always tied to income The public tends to approve of contributory benefits, which is what designers of such schemes intended.
Safety-net benefits carry no such sense of entitlement, and are less popular. Yet they have grown more rapidly in large part because the 1980-82 recession increased the number of people of working age who had exhausted their right to contributory benefits. And an increasing proportion of the poor are people for whom the contributory systems were never designed: the young and lone mothers. In consequence, payments which carry a clear entitlement have become less significant, compared with those which appear to depend purely on state charity.
The rise in the bill for the unpopular kind of social protection comes at a time when governments want to curb state spending. It comes, too, at a time when many countries have done almost everything they can think of to protect the poor. A decade ago many on the left argued that poverty was usually caused by circumstances outside the control of the poor—a lack of jobs, disability, old age, racial discrimination, broken marriages. One way or another, governments have tried to tackle most of these problems. Still the poor remain.
Existing social security systems are increasingly expensive to operate because()
A. more people have lost their jobs
B. many countries have done all they call for the poor
C. poverty has increased uncontrollably
D. more people are in the safety-net category
参考答案:D
解析:
细节题。由第四段第二句“Yet they have grown more rapidly…And an increasing proportion of the poor are people for whom the contributory systems were never designed…”可知因为越来越多的穷人不适用于保险金制度,社会安全网制度发展得更快,而这种制度完全是一种没有个人贡献的政府救济,这势必会导致社会保障制度的运行代价越来越高。故D项“更多的人处于安全网覆盖的范围内”正确。A项:文中没有提到。B项:末段第二句提到,当国家为保护穷人竭尽所能的时候,通过社会安全网制度支出的费用却在增加。这只是为了说明政府控制贫穷的效果不好(从而为文章结尾的观点作铺垫),而不是为了说明社会保障系统代价越来越高的原因。C项:文中没有谈到贫穷人口的总数在增加。本项是对末段倒数第二句话中“…poverty was usually caused by circumstances outside the control of the poor…”的曲解。