Questions 33-35
Complete the summary below.
Choose
NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS
from the passage for each answer. Write your
answers in boxes 33-35 on your answer sheet
33 |
P a g e
Research data shows that sea level has a closely relation with the change of climate. The
major reason for the increase in sea level is connected with 33 ____________ , The
increase in sea level is also said to have a threat to the underground water system, the
destruction of which caused by rise of sea level will lead to a high probability of reduction
in 34_____________ . In the long run, New Zealanders may have to improve the
35__________ if they want to diminish the effect change in sea levels.
Questions 36-40
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage 3?
In boxes 36-40 on your answer sheet, write
YES
if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer.
NO
if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN
if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
36. Farmers are less responsive to climate change than agriculturists.
37. Agricultural sector is too conservative and deal with climate change.
38. Turtle is vulnerable to climate change.
39. The global warming is going slowly, and it may have different effects on different areas
in New Zealand
40. New Zealand must cut carbon dioxide emission if they want to solve the problem of
global warming.
34 |
P a g e
Reading Test 3
SECTION 1
Grey Workers
A
Given the speed at which their workers are growing greyer, employers know
surprisingly little about how productive they are. The general assumption is that the old
are paid more in spite of, rather than because of, their extra productivity. That might partly
explain why, when employers are under pressure to cut costs, they persuade the 55-year-
olds to take early retirement. Earlier this year, Sun Life of Canada, an insurance company,
announced that it was offering redundancy to all its British employees aged 50or over “to
bring in ne
w blood”.
B
In Japan, says Mariko Fujiwara, an industrial anthropologist who runs a think-tank for
Hakuhodo, Japan’s second-largest advertising agency, most companies are bringing
down the retirement age from the traditional 57 to 50 or thereabouts - and in some cases,
such as Nissan, to 45. More than perhaps anywhere else, pay in Japan is linked to
seniority. Given that the percentage of workers who have spent more than 32 years with
the same employer rose from 11% in 1980 to 42% by 1994
,
it is hardly surprising that
seniority-based wage costs have become the most intractable item on corporate profit-
and-loss accounts.
C
In Germany, Patrick Pohl, spokesman for Hoechst, expresses a widely held view: “The
company is trying to lower the average age of the workforce. Perhaps the main reason
for replacing older workers is that it makes it easier to ‘defrost’ the corporate culture. Older
workers are less willing to try a new way of thinking. Younger workers are cheaper and
more flexible.” Some German firms are hampered from getting rid of older workers as
quickly as they would like. At SGL Carbon, a graphite producer, the average age of
workers has been going up not down. The reason, says the company’s Ivo Lingnau, is
not that SGL values older workers more. It is collective bargaining: the union agreement
puts strict limits on the proportion of workers that may retire early.
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