Achieve IELTS test 4
Reading Passage 2
You should spend about 20 minutes
on Question 14-26, which are based on Reading Passage 2
A New Fair
Trade Organisation
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Trade has, so far, proved ineffective in solving
the major problems faced by most nations. However, the answer to the
injustices of the existing trade regime is not no trade, but fair trade.
The existing regime forbids poor nations from
following the path taken by the rich. With the exceptions of Switzerland,
Belgium and Netherlands, all the nations that have become independently
wealthy did so with the help of a mechanism economics call ‘infant industry
protection’; defending new sectors from foreign competition until they are
big enough to compete on equal terms. The textile industry in Britain, for
example, on which the Industrial Revolution was built in the nineteenth
century, was nurtured and promoted by means of tariffs (or trade taxes) and
the outright prohibition of competing goods. Between 1864 and 1913, the US
was the most heavily protected nation on earth. Only when these countries has
established technological and commercial superiority did they suddenly
discover the virtues of unimpeded competition.
For nations to develop indirect competition with
countries with established industries is like learning to swim in
fast-flowing river; your competitors have experience, legal rights and
established marketing networks on their side; your infant industries have
none of these. It is all but impossible, in other words, for poor nations to
extract money from the rich unless they can safeguard some key parts of their
economies.
Clearly, nations that are currently poor should be
permitted to defend certain industries from foreign competition with the help
of tariff barriers and subsidies. Rich nations, on the other hand, should be
permitted neither to subsidise their industries nor to impose tariffs on
imports. Nations should be forced gradually to lift their protections as they
develop. So, the first function of what we might call the Fair Trade
Organisation (FTO) would be to lay down the rules governing the protections
and privileges permitted at different stages of development.
A fair-trade system should, or so we should hope,
slowly push the world towards genuine free trade, which is likely to be the
most equitable means of governing nations; relationships with each other.
This system could provide a potent
means by which the world could begin to move towards the economics equality
that is an essential precondition for political equality. It would not,
however, directly address some of the other critical problems that the people
of poor nations confront – such as inadequate working conditions,
environmental devastation and the inordinate power of the multinational
corporations.
Many campaigners in the rich world have suggested
that the best way to raise standards is to discriminate, through tariffs or
other measures, against imports from countries where workers or the
environment are mistreated. This approach has also been advocated by trades
unions seeking to protect members’ jobs from foreigners. Unsurprisingly, it
is deeply resented by the very people it is supposed to help; the workers of
the poor world.
If our purpose is to regulate international trade,
then it surely makes sense to address the behaviour, not of nation states,
but of the multinational corporations operating between them. So a second
function of the FTO could be to set the standards to which those corporations
must conform. A corporation would not be permitted to trade between nations
unless it could demonstrate that, at every stage of manufacture and
distribution, its own operations and those of its suppliers met the necessary
standards.
If, for example, a food – processing corporation
based in Europe wished to import cocoa from an Africa country, it would need
to demonstrate that the plantation owners it bought from were not using
banned pesticides, expanding into protected forests or failing to conform to
whatever other standards the FTO set. The company’s performance would be
assessed, at its own expense, by monitors accredited to the organisation.
One other precondition of justice is that producers
and consumers should carry their own costs, rather than dumping them on other
people. The monitors deployed by the FTO could determine whether or not
companies are paying a fair price for the resources they use. Companies
would, among other costs, have to buy enough of a nation’s carbon quota to
cover the fossil fuel they consume.
One of the many beneficial impacts of such
full-cost accounting would be that everything that could be processed in the
country of origin would be. No multinational company would export logs,
coffee beans or cotton, as it requires far more (costly) energy to transport
these bulky resources from one place to another than would be involved in
exporting the finished products – furniture, instant coffee and T-shirts (all
currently manufactured on the other side of the world). Those nations which
are currently locked into the export of raw materials would become the most
favoured locations for manufacturing.
Under the scheme, export growth comes to measure
something quite different. At present it represents a mixture of gains and
losses, which are misleadingly compounded into a single figure. The loss of
natural resources is ‘added’ to the genuine addition of value provided by the
application of labour. The FTO system would effectively separate these
measures. The extraction and export of natural resources would in most cases
be accounted as a loss. The application of human labour would be measured as
gain. Nations would be able to see immediately whether they were being
enriched or impoverished through trade. To introduce these measures in the
face of the resistance of the world’s most powerful governments and companies
would require severe and unusual methods. But the goal of universal fair
trade would permit the global economic levelling without which there can be no
justice.
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Questions
14-19
Choose
the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write the
correct letter in boxes 14-19 on your answer sheet.
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14
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The writer refers to textile production in
Britain in order to
A.
point out
how differently industries were financed in the past
B.
show how
unnecessary tariff barriers are for countries today
C.
help the
reader understand how infant industry protection works
D.
compare
European trade development with that of the United States
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15
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What
is the writer’s main point in the third paragraph?
A. Business will succeed if they can learn
from established companies
B. Detailed market research is often neglected
in developing countries
C. You have to be prepared to adapt your
products quickly to follow fashion
D. New industries in poor countries will
probably fail without protection
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16
|
According to the writer, a fair trade
system could have the effect of
A. improving safety in the majority of
workplaces around the world.
B. preventing the continued destruction of
endangered wildlife habitats.
C. Encouraging states to work together in a
more even-handed way.
D. Making politicians agree to more
representative systems of government.
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17
|
What
point is the writer making in the sixth paragraph?
A. The trades unions’ aim is to help foreign
workers gain better conditions.
B. The trades unions are concerned about the
effects of imports on local jobs.
C. Workers in poor countries are grateful for
the trades unions’ support.
D. Campaigners are right to suggest imposing
tariffs against bad treatment.
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18
|
According to the writer, what is one of the
benefits of full-cost accounting?
A. Factories would be set up and jobs created
in the country of origin.
B. Multinational companies would consume fewer
natural resources.
C. The export of finished products around the
world would decrease.
D. Countries would be able to keep their
resources for the domestic market.
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19
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What
conclusion does the writer come to about the FTO system?
A.
It would
help to combat injustice in its many different forms.
B.
It would be
difficult to introduce but would be worth the effort.
C.
States all
over the world would earn more through trade as a result of it.
D.
Multinationals
would accept it because it measures exports more precisely.
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Questions 20-26
Complete the summary below.
Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from
the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 20-26 on
your answer sheet.
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A
proposal for Regulating Multinational Corporations
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The FTO would determine the 20_________ for the
multinational corporations to follow. In this way, a multinational
corporation would have to prove that all aspects of the way it produced its
goods and the systems for their 21_________ to customers was in line with FTO
requirements. Similarly it would need to satisfy the FTO that the processes
employed by any 22_________ that it used were also acceptable.
As an illustration, in order to source cocoa from
Africa, a corporation would have to ensure that no illegal 23_________ were
being used by the 24_________ during cultivation and that they had not taken
over land from 25_________.
It would not be sufficient for multinational
corporations to say that these points had been checked. Their conduct would
have to be inspired by 26_________ appointed by the FTO
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ANSWER
KEY
14
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C
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15
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D
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16
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C
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17
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B
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18
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A
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19
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B
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20
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standards/rules
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21
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distribution
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22
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suppliers
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23
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pesticides
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24
|
plantation owners
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25
|
protected
forests
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28
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monitors
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