单选题 During the first 70 years of the 20th century, inequality declined and Americans prospered together. Over the last 30 years, by contrast, the United States developed the most unequal distribution of income and wages of any high-income country.
Some analysts see the gulf between the rich and the rest as an incentive for strivers, or as just the way things are. Others see it as having a corrosive effect on people's faith in the markets and democracy. Still others contend that economic polarization is a root cause of America's political polarization. Could, and should, something be done?
Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz, two Harvard economists, think yes. Their book, the Race Between Education and Technology (Harvard, $ 39.95), contain many tables, a few equations and a powerfully told story about how and why the United States became the world's richest nation--namely, thanks to its schools.
The authors skillfully demonstrate that for more than a century, and at a steady rate, technological breakthroughs--the mass production system, electricity, computers--have been increasing the demand for ever more educated workers. And, they show, America's school system met this demand, not with a national policy, but in grassroots fashion, as communities taxed themselves and built schools and colleges.
If only it were that easy.
The authors' argument is really two books in one. One offers an incisive history of American education, especially the spread of the public high school and the state university system. It proves to be an uplifting tale of public commitment and open access. The authors remind us that the United States long remained "the best poor man's country". A place where talent could rise.
The other story rigorously measures the impact of education on income. The authors' compilation of hard data on educational attainment according to when people were bona is an awesome achievement, though not always a gripping read.
They show that by the 1850s, America's school enrollment rate already "exceeded that of any other nation". And this lead held for a long time. By 1960, some 70 percent of Americans graduated from high school--far above the rate in any other country. College graduation rates also rose.
In the marketplace, such educational attainment was extremely valuable, but it didn't produce wide economic disparity so long as more people were coming to the job market with education. The Wage premium-- or differential paid to people with a high school or a college education--fell between 1915 and 1950.
But more recently, high school graduation rates flatlined at around 70 percent. American college attendance roses, though college graduation rates languished. The upshot is that while the average college graduates in 1970 earned 45 percent more than high school graduates, the differential three decades later exceeds 80 percent.
"In the first half of the century," the authors summarize, "education raced of technology, but later in the century technology raced ahead of educational gains."
Proving that the demand for and supply of educated workers began not in the time of Bill Gates but in the era of Thomas Edison is virtuoso social science. But wasn't a slowdown in rising educational attainment unavoidable? After all, it's one thing to increase the average years of schooling by leaps and bounds when most people start near zero, but quite another when national average is already high.
The authors reject the idea that the United States has reached some natural limit in educational advances. Other countries are now at higher levels.
What, then, is holding American youth back?
The authors give a two-part answer. For one thing, the financial aid system is a maze. More important, many people with high school diplomas are not ready for college.
The second problem, the authors write, is concentrated mostly in inner-city schools. Because the poor cannot easily move to better school districts, the authors allow that charter schools as well as vouchers, including those for private school, could be helpful, but more evaluation is necessary.
Data on the effects of preschool are plentiful, and point to large returns on investment, so the authors join the chorus in extolling Head Start, the federal government's largest preschool program.
Providing more children with a crucial start, along with easier ways to find financial aid, are laudable national objectives. One suspects, though, that the obstacles to getting more young people into and through college have to do with knotty social and cultural issues.
But assume that the author's policies would raise the national college graduation rate. Would that deeply reduce inequality?
Averages can be deceptive. Most of the gains of the recent flush decades have not gone to the college-educated as a whole. The top 10 or 20 percent by income have education levels roughly equivalent to those in the top 1 percent, but the latter account for much of the boom in inequality. This appears to be related to the way taxed have been cut, and to the ballooning of the financial industry's share of corporate profits.
It remains to be seen how a reconfigured financial industry and possible new tax policies might affect the 30-year trend toward greater inequality.
In the meantime, it is nice to be reminded, in a data-rich book, that greater investments in human capital once put Americans collectively on top of the world.

单选题 When can be learned from the book entitled The Race Between Education and Technology?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】这道题目的答案可以在第三段最后一句中找到。“Their book...told story about how and why the United States became the world's richest nation——namely, thanks to its school”,因此答案为B,文中出现的那本书的中心思想就是教育在美国发展过程中的作用。选项A在文中并未提到;从第十三段中可以得知,科技发展超过教育发展是在20世纪后半期,而不是在20世纪初,因此选项C是错误的;选项D原文中并未提及,因此不正确,所以本题答案为B。
单选题 Which of the following is considered a significant cause of rising inequality according to Claudia Goldin and Lawrence F. Katz?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】文章在第五段中指出,两位作者的观点是“the education system failed to keep pace resulting in a sharply unequal nation”,那么教育体系跟不上时代发展的具体表现就是大学毕业率的停滞不前,因此答案为D。第六段虽然也提到了“高移民率”和“工会成员的减少”也是作者承认的原因,但是并不是主要原因,因此A项和C项都不正确;第六段末尾虽然提到了executive compensation,但是与本题无关,因此答案为D。
单选题 What does the underlined word "laudable" mean?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】即使不认识这个单词,也可以从这个词语所在的句子推断出它的意思:“为更多的孩子提供一个好的起点,并找到更加简便的方式为他们提供财政资助”这些都是“值得赞扬的”,并且,上一段话中也有对这个单词词义的暗示:“so the authors join the chorus in extolling Head Start”说的也是作者在大唱赞歌,与下文意思相符,因此答案为C。
单选题 Which of the following led to the slowdown in American educational advances in the last three decades of the 20th century?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】在本文第十六段中作者提出了与本题相同的问题,然后在第十七、十八段中给出了答案。第十七段中给出的第一个原因就是“For one thing, the financial aid system is a maze”,因此答案为A。
单选题 What does the author think of the book entitled The Race Between Education and Technology?
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】通读全文可以看出,文中介绍的这本书主要是对human capital的研究,因此答案为A。也可以使用排除法:本文虽然提到两位作者是经济学家,但是并没有提到这本书的读者群,因此B项不对;在第九段的最后,作者写到“though not always a gripping read”说明这本书并不是那么有趣的、引人入胜的读物,因此C项也不正确;D项说本书“包含大量数据”,虽然是事实,但是不够全面,不能概括作者对本书的看法,因此A项为正确答案。