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    Across the rich world, well-educated people increasingly work longer than the less-skilled. Some 65% of American men aged 62-74 with a professional degree are in the workforce, compared with 32% of men with only a high-school certificate. This gap is part of a deepening divide between the well-educated well-off and the unskilled poor. Rapid technological advance has raised the incomes of the highly skilled while squeezing those of the unskilled. The consequences, for individuals and society, are profound.

    The world is facing an astonishing rise in the number of old people, and they will live longer than ever before. Over the next 20 years the global population of those aged 65 or more will almost double, from 600 million to 1.1 billion. The experience of the 20th century, when greater longevity (长寿) translated into more years in retirement rather than more years at work, has persuaded many observers that this shift will lead to slower economic growth, while the swelling ranks of pensioners will create government budget problems.

    But the notion of a sharp division between the working young and the idle old misses a new trend, the growing gap between the skilled and the unskilled. Employment rates are falling among younger unskilled people, whereas older skilled folk are working longer. The divide is most extreme in America, where well-educated baby-boomers (二战后生育高峰期出生的美国人) are putting off retirement while many less-skilled younger people have dropped out of the workforce.

    Policy is partly responsible. Many European governments have abandoned policies that used to encourage people to retire early. Rising life expectancy (预期寿命), combined with the replacement of generous defined-benefit pension plans with less generous defined-contribution ones, means that even the better-off must work longer to have a comfortable retirement. But the changing nature of work also plays a big role. Pay has risen sharply for the highly educated, and those people continue to reap rich rewards into old age because these days the educated elderly are more productive than the preceding generation. Technological change may well reinforce that shift: the skills that complement computers, from management know how to creativity, do not necessarily decline with age.

65. What is characteristic of work in the 21st century?

A
Computers will do more complicated work.
B
More will be taken by the educated young.
C
Most jobs to be done will be the creative ones.
D
Skills are highly valued regardless of age.
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答案:

D

解析:

65. D)

解析:根据最后一句中 Technological change may well reinforce that shift: the skills that complement computers, from management know-how to creativity, do not necessarily decline with age.可知,科技进步会巩固劳动力构成的转型过程,电脑技能、管理能力、创造力等能力不会随年龄增大而衰弱。也就是说年龄和21世纪的工作特点有关联。A选项没有在原文中提及,B选项否定了年长者的作用,所以也不正确,C说工作是由创造力强的人完成,但原文说创造力和年龄没有直接关系,所以也不选。因此D项正确。

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