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GWD-4-22

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楼主
发表于 2005-3-8 22:41:00 | 只看该作者

GWD-4-22

GWD-4-Q22 to GWD-4-Q25:


      Many managers are influenced by


       dangerous myths about pay that lead


       to counterproductive decisions about


Line how their companies compensate


  (5)      employees.  One such myth is that


labor rates, the rate per hour paid to


workers, are identical with labor costs,


the money spent on labor in relation to


the productivity of the labor force.


(10)      This myth leads to the assumption that


a company can simply lower its labor


costs by cutting wages.  But labor


costs and labor rates are not in fact


the same:  one company could pay


(15)      its workers considerably more than


another and yet have lower labor


costs if that company’s productivity


were higher due to the talent of its


workforce, the efficiency of its work


(20)      processes, or other factors.  The


       confusion of costs with rates per-


       sists partly because labor rates are


a convenient target for managers who


want to make an impact on their com-


(25)      pany’s budgets.  Because labor rates


are highly visible, managers can easily


compare their company’s rates with


those of competitors.  Furthermore,


labor rates often appear to be a


(30)      company’s most malleable financial


variable:  cutting wages appears an


easier way to control costs than such


       options as reconfiguring work pro-


cesses or altering product design.


(35)           The myth that labor rates and labor


costs are equivalent is supported by


business journalists, who frequently


confound the two.  For example, prom-


inent business journals often remark on


(40)     the “high” cost of German labor, citing


as evidence the average amount paid


to German workers.  The myth is also


perpetuated by the compensation-


consulting industry, which has its own


(45)      incentives to keep such myths alive.


First, although some of these con-


sulting firms have recently broadened


their practices beyond the area of


compensation, their mainstay con-


(50)      tinues to be advising companies on


changing their compensation prac-


tices.  Suggesting that a company’s


performance can be improved in


some other way than by altering its


(55)      pay system may be empirically cor-


rect but contrary to the consultants’


interests.  Furthermore, changes


to the compensation system may


appear to be simpler to implement


(60)      than changes to other aspects of an


organization, so managers are more


likely to find such advice from con-


sultants palatable.  Finally, to the


extant that changes in compensation


(65)      create new problems, the consultants


will continue to have work solving the


problems that result from their advice.


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GWD-4-Q22:


The author of the passage suggests which of the following about the advice that the consulting firms discussed in the passage customarily give to companies attempting to control costs?


              



  • It often fails to bring about the intended changes in companies’ compensation systems.

  • It has highly influenced views that predominate in prominent business journals.

  • It tends to result in decreased labor rates but increased labor costs.

  • It leads to changes in companies’ compensation practices that are less visible than changes to work processes would be.  应该是 that are more easier.

  • It might be different if the consulting firms were less narrowly specialized.

  • (A) 


    请问这题为什么选A?

    沙发
    发表于 2005-3-10 14:17:00 | 只看该作者
    When the quiz says SUGGEST or IMPLY or something like these, the answer is supposed to be implicitly expressed in the article.

    The article gives us three major incentives by which the the consultingfirms advice their clienteles; none of these three incentives, however,will bring about the intended changes. In addition to this, by thewording of thesentence that "Suggesting that a company’s performance can be improved in some other way than by altering its pay system may be empirically correct but contrary to the consultants’ interests. ", in which the "some other way than by altering its pay system" may be the intended change, we can observe the same suggestion.

    And the other options are more groundless than A.
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