Along with red letterboxes and telephone booths, London's black taxis are touted as symbolic of the city. Fully 25,600 drivers trundle around the capital's streets. They are privileged: unlike minicabs, they can pick up passengers hailing in the street and run on a pricey meter system rather than a fixed fee. Nationally the average fare is £5.77 ($9.56) for two miles; in London it is £7.20. All cabbies are required to pass the "knowledge", a test of all the roads within a six-mile radius of central London. If they take a daft route to their destination it is usually deliberate.
    But becoming a taxi driver is ever harder. In the 1970s the "knowledge" took around 23 months to complete. Last year it took 50 months. "You can get a PhD in the same time," complains Malcolm Paice of CityFleet, a radio-taxi firm. Between 2009 and 2012 the number of taxi drivers increased by only 4% in London. Faced with such a high barrier to entry, more people are taking a shorter course that only allows them to drive black cabs in suburban areas, says Tom Moody of Transport for London (TfL).
    But in the same period the number of minicab drivers in London jumped by 19%, to 67,000. The scorn they receive from black-taxi drivers is little deserved. Liam Griffin, the boss of Addison Lee, a large minicab firm, says minicabs have become more comparable to black cabs since 2004, when regulations and criminal-record checks were introduced. All of the company's drivers take a six-week course and rely on satellite navigation systems—as do some black-taxi drivers. Their fares are around a third cheaper, Mr. Griffin says.
    Yet the separation between the two kinds of taxis looks likely to stay. In April the Law Commission, an independent body, will release a report on the taxi trade. Many of its recommendations will boost minicabs outside London. Larger firms such as Addison Lee will find it easier to expand as licensing rules are simplified. But London's black cabs look likely to be protected. They will still be regulated by TfL; barriers to entry will remain high. Instead of nurturing a dwindling trade, this could have the opposite effect. Black cabs might soon become as quaintly ancient as telephone booths.  It can be inferred from the first paragraph that ______.
 
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】 推理判断题。第一段倒数第三句给出信息,全国打的的平均费用是每两英里5.77英镑,而伦敦市是7.20英镑,所以选C项。其他地区即全国其他地区。
   A项,第一段第三句说到可以有优先权接到街边打的的乘客,用非固定的计费方式收取较高费用的并不是迷你的士,而是黑的士;B项,第一段最后一句说到司机们虽然要接受一个测试以防他们绕路,但实际情况是他们依然会故意绕路,所以B项也不正确;D项,原文说到只要司机通过一个测试即可,所以D项也不正确。