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【单选题】
The miserable fate of Enron's employees will be a landmark in business history, one of those awful events that everyone agrees must never be allowed to happen again. This urge is understandable and noble: thousands have lost virtually all their retirement savings with the demise of Enron stock. But making sure it never happens again may not be possible, because the sudden impoverishment of those Enron workers represents something even larger than it seems. It's the latest turn in the unwinding of one of the most audacious promise of the 20th century. The promise was assured economic security—even comfort—for essentially everyone in the developed world. With the explosion of wealth, that began in the 19th century it became possible to think about a possibility no one had dared to dream before. The fear at the center of daily living since caveman days—lack of food, warmth, and shelter—would at last lose its power to terrify. That remarkable promise became reality in many ways. Governments created welfare systems for anyone in need and separate programs for the elderly (Social Security in the U. S.). Labor unions promised not only better pay for workers but also pensions for retirees. Giant corporations came into being and offered the possibility—in some cases the promise—of lifetime employment plus guaranteed pensions. The cumulative effect was a fundamental change in how millions of people approached life itself, a reversal of attitude that most rank as one of the largest in human history. For millennia the average person's stance toward providing for himself had been. Ultimately I'm on my own. Now it became, ultimately I'll be taken care of. The early hints that this promise might be broken on a large scale came in the 1980s. U.S. business had become uncompetitive globally and began restructuring massively, with huge layoffs. The trend accelerated in the 1990s as the bastions of corporate welfare faced reality. IBM ended it's no-layoff policy. AT & T fired thousands, many of whom found such a thing simply incomprehensible, and a few of whom killed themselves. The other supposed guarantors of our economic security were also in decline. Labor-union membership and power fell to their lowest levels in decades. President Clinton signed a historic bill scaling back welfare. Americans realized that Social Security won't provide social security for any of us. A less visible but equally significant trend affected pensions. To make costs easier to control, companies moved away from defined-benefit pension plans, which obligate them to pay out specified amounts years in the future, to defined contribution plans, which specify only how much goes into the play today. The most common type of defined-contribution plan is the 401(k). The significance of the 401(k) is that it puts most of the responsibility for a person's economic fate back on the employee. Within limits the employee must decide how much goes into the plan each year and how it gets invested—the two factors that will determine how much it's worth when the employee retires. Which brings us back to Enron? Those billions of dollars in vaporized retirement savings went in employees' 401(k) accounts. That is, the employees chose how much money to put into those accounts and then chose how to invest it. Enron matched a certain proportion of each employees 401 (k) contribution with company stock, so everyone was going to end up with some Enron in his or her portfolio but that could be regarded as a freebie, since nothing compels a company to match employee contributions at all. At least two special features complicate the Enron case. First, some shareholders charge top management with illegally covering up the company's problems, prompting investors to hang on when they should have sold. Second, Enron's 401(k) accounts were locked while the company changed plan administrators in October, when the stock was falling, so emp
A.
Because the company has gone bankrupt.
B.
Because such events would never happen again.
C.
Because many Enron workers lost their retirement savings.
D.
Because it signifies a turning point in economic security.
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参考答案:
举一反三
【判断题】词牌决定一个乐谱所属的宫调,并表示这首词音乐的特性。 ()
A.
正确
B.
错误
【多选题】毛泽东在《矛盾论》中指出: “由于无产阶级的领导,根本地改变了革命的面貌,引出了阶级关系的新调度, 农民革命的大发动, 反帝国主义和反封建主义的革命彻底性,由民主革命转变到社会主义革命的可能性,等等。所有这些,都是在资产阶级领导革命时期不可能出现的。 ”中国的资产阶级民主主义革命必须由无产阶级领导,这是( )。
A.
由无产阶级的特性决定的
B.
因为它顺应了时代的要求
C.
由中国革命的性质和前途决定的
D.
由资产阶级的妥协性所决定的
【判断题】网瘾综合症产生的原因是多方面的。外因方面,一是惊险.刺激的网络游戏.娱乐项目对某些上网大学生构成了不可抗拒的吸引力,使他们沉湎其中不能自拔;二是高校大学生充裕的上网时间和便捷的上网条件。内因方面,大学生正处于世界观.人生观和价值观逐渐成熟的关键时期。大学生价值观不平衡.不稳定,看待问题不够理性,辨别信息真伪能力较弱,容易走向极端;自我管理能力缺乏,抵抗挫折能力较差,常常有挫折感,容易自卑.孤独.消...
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】结型场效应管可分为:
A.
MOS管和MNS管
B.
NPN型和PNP型
C.
增强型和耗尽型
D.
N沟道和P沟道
【判断题】对不可抗力事件的处理,关键是对不可抗力事件的认定。( )
A.
正确
B.
错误
【判断题】词牌决定一个乐谱所属的宫调,并表示这首词音乐的特性。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】结型场效应管可分为( )。
A.
MOS管和MNS管
B.
N沟道和P沟道
C.
增强型和耗尽型
D.
NPN型和PNP型
【判断题】一个乐谱所属的宫调由词牌决定,词牌并表示这首词音乐的特性。()
A.
正确
B.
错误
【简答题】的恶性膨胀是魏晋南北朝时期政治方面最突出的特征。
【单选题】结型场效应管可分为( )。
A.
N沟道耗尽型、P沟道耗尽型
B.
N沟道增强型、P沟道耗尽型
C.
N沟道耗尽型、P沟道耗尽型
D.
N沟道增强型、P沟道增强型
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