[外语类试卷]专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷113及答案与解析.doc
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1、专业英语八级(阅读)模拟试卷 113及答案与解析 SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are several passages followed by fourteen multiple-choice questions. For each multiple-choice question, there are four suggested answers marked A , B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. 0 (1)Wh
2、en times are good, they are very, very good for consultants. But when they are bad, they are horrid. As the economy stalled in 2009, the global consulting industry shrank by 9.1%. It was the worst year since at least 1982, according to Kennedy Information, an industry monitor. (2)Now the kids are ba
3、ck in the conference rooms. Companies that shelved plans during the recession are dusting them off and looking for help. And the work is more cheerful. When bosses did hire consultants in 2009, 87% of projects were aimed at cutting costs rather than boosting growth, says Kennedy. This year, just 47%
4、 of project spending will be on cutting costs. The rest will go on growth plans, from mergers to installing new computer systems. But not all will benefit equally. (3)Consulting is a diverse industry. Best known are the elite strategy consultancies such as McKinsey & Co, the Boston Consulting Group(
5、BCG)and Bain. Firms such as AT Kearney, Booz & Company and Oliver Wyman do the same sort of work but are smaller. A second category comprises the consulting units of the Big Four accounting firmsPwC, Deloitte, KPMG and Ernst & Young. All but Deloitte shed their consulting units in the early 2000s, a
6、mid post-Enron fears of conflict-of-interest, but have since grown new ones. A third group consists of technology firms with big consulting businesses, such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard, which focus on installing and integrating computer systems. Finally, some consultants are hard to distinguish from
7、pure outsourcing firms. (4)Strategy consulting, the most famous variety, is also the most controversial. “I like to con people. And I like to insult people. If you combine con and insult, you get consult,“ observes Dogbert, a comic-strip character. Many firms share this harsh view of me highly paid
8、advisers who walk in and tell them to re-invent their businesses. Spending on strategy consulting is expected to grow by an annual average of just 1.1% to 2014(it currently accounts for 12% of all spending on consulting). But more ordinary work is booming. Kennedy forecasts that consulting on operat
9、ions-management(advice on how to do the same things better)will grow by 5.1% a year, that on IT by 3.9% and that on personnel by 4.0%, between 2010 and 2014. (5)North America invented the strategic consultant, but appears not to need many more. Western Europe seems satiated, too. Companies are now p
10、acked with MBA-holding bosses, many of them former consultants. Well-run companies still know when they need outside expertise, which is why strategy consulting is far from dead. But it is increasingly overshadowed by the less glamorous variety. Small wonder, then, that the strategy houses are compe
11、ting for that work. BCG was one of just three big firms to grow(by about 3%)in 2009, and had a good 2010, expanding by some 12%. It is expecting an even better 2012, with 15% growth. One reason is rapid growth in emerging markets. But BCG, like the other strategy firms, has also made money by grabbi
12、ng a larger share of “downstream“ work. (6)This is bringing the strategy shops into competition with the biggest players: the Big Four audit firms. They are buying specialist firms in areas such as technology and health care, thus expanding their size and reach by both specialism and geography. In A
13、merica they are forbidden from selling consulting to their audit clients. But elsewhere the rules are looser, giving the Big Four a potential “one-stop-shop“ offer. Everywhere, they have scale that impresses clients. But those clients are driving harder bargains. (7)In the past two decades most cons
14、ulting firms have attached many junior consultants to projects with just a few senior people and partners, moving this army into the clients offices and billing for as many hours as possible. But increasingly, clients are refusing to pay for junior staffs on-the-job training. Instead, they are askin
15、g for fewer and better consultants and setting them to work alongside their own staff. (8)In short, consulting is looking less like a licence to print money and more like temporary labour. Clients can bypass the big names and hire consultancies such as Eden McCallum, a British firm that packages tea
16、ms of experienced independent consultants, or Point B, an American firm that provides only a project manager, letting the client select the team. Big consulting firms(with their big brands)can probably coexist with smaller operators. But midsized firms, which cannot command the same fees and loyalty
17、 as the big boys, are feeling the squeeze. 1 Which of the following is NOT the purpose of consulting projects? ( A) To reduce costs. ( B) To enhance development. ( C) To manage operations. ( D) To remodel business. 2 How many types of consulting companies are there in the consulting industry? ( A) T
18、wo. ( B) Three. ( C) Four. ( D) Five. 3 Which of the following statements is true according to the fifth paragraph? ( A) Strategy consulting firms are no longer needed. ( B) Strategy consulting business thrives in Europe. ( C) Strategy consultants are in great demand. ( D) Some proportion of strateg
19、y consulting has been occupied by its peers. 4 Which of the following statements is NOT true about the Big Four? ( A) They have acquired companies in technological field. ( B) They can offer consulting service to their audit clients anywhere. ( C) They have their own consulting branch. ( D) They are
20、 globally-operated firms. 4 (1)One of the Labour Partys many transformations during Tony Blairs leadership was its conversion to environmentalism. A party with its roots in dirty, heavy industry such as coal-mines and blast-furnaces presented itself as an eco-friendly guardian of the planets future.
21、 The most visible form of this was a commitment, in Labours 1997 manifesto, to cut 20% off British greenhouse-gas emissions by 2010 compared with their 1990 levels. That went above and beyond the 12.5% required by the Kyoto treaty. (2)This pledge has been repeated as recently as the last election, b
22、ut the promises have not stood up to reality. Since 1999, British greenhouse-gas emissions have been broadly unchanged. Disillusionment among environmentalists has gradually given way to an anger which found an attention-grabbing means of expression this week, when Greenpeace dumped a lorry-load of
23、coal outside Downing Street. Stephen Tindale, its boss and a former government adviser, accused Mr. Blair of empty rhetoric. (3)So far, Britain has had an easy ride cutting emissions. The rhythm of technological change and relatively painless policy choices have helped put the country on course to m
24、eet its Kyoto obligations. In an attempt to rescue the 20% target, ministers have ordered a policy review. The review acknowledged that cutting emissions further will be hard. (4)Power generation is a good example of why. The governments “flagship policy“ on climate change has been to offer subsidie
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