题目内容

Which of the following is true about the present bill?

A. The bill is widely supported by various political strips.
B. The bill will impose severe punishment on illegal immigrants.
C. The bill is designed to improve American immigration system.
D. The bill will ensure that no illegals are knowingly hired.

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Yahoo! and MSN are making less money for the same number of searches chiefly because

A. they are not good at negotiating with News Corporation.
B. they are losing market share very quickly.
C. they lack advanced advertising technology and networks.
D. they have failed in designing their new advertising algorithm.

Provident says that the typical interest rate is closer to 50% and that it charges no fees for late payments or breaching credit limits. Still, that is triple the rate on regular credit cards and far above the 30% charged by store cards. And the Vanquis card is being launched just when Britain's politicians and media are full of worry about soaring consumer debt. Last month, a man took his own life after running up debts of £130,000 on 22 different credit cards.
Credit cards for "sub-prime" borrowers, as the industry delicately calls those with poor credit records, are new in Britain but have been common in America for a while. Lenders began issuing them when the prime market became saturated, prompting them to look for new sources of profit. Even in America, the sub-prime market has plenty of room for growth. David Robertson of the Nilson Report, a trade magazine, reckons that outstanding sub-prime credit-card debt accounts for only 3% of the $597 billion that Americans owe on plastic. The sub-prime sector grew by 7.9% last year, compared with only 2.6% for the industry as a whole.
You might wonder, though, how companies can make money from lending to customers they know to be bad risks—or at any rate, how they can do it legitimately. Whereas delinquencies in the credit-card industry as a whole are around 4%—5%, those in the sub-prime market are almost twice as high, and can reach 15% in hard times.
Obviously, issuers charge higher interest rates to compensate them for the higher risk of not being repaid. And all across the credit-card industry, the assessment and pricing of risks has been getting more and more refined, thanks largely to advances in technology and data processing. Companies also use sophisticated computer programs to track slower payment or other signs of increased risk. Sub-prime issuers pay as much attention to collecting debt as to managing risk; they impose extra charges, such as application fees; and they cap their potential losses by lending only small amounts ($500 is a typical credit limit).
All this is easier to describe than to do, especially when the economy slows. After the bursting of the technology bubble in 2000, several sub-prime credit-card providers failed. Now there are only around 100, of which nine issue credit cards. Survivors such as Metris and Providian, two of the bigger sub-prime card companies, have become choosier about their customers' credit histories.
As the economy recovered, so did lenders' fortunes. Fitch, a rating agency, says that the proportion of sub-prime credit-card borrowers who are more than 60 days in arrears(a good predictor of eventual default) is the lowest since November 2001. But with American interest rates rising again, some worry about another squeeze. As Fitch's Michael Dean points out, sub-prime borrowers tend to have not just higher-rate credit cards, but dearer auto loans and variable-rate mortgages as well. That makes a risky business even riskier.
Sir Joshua Waddilove is mentioned in the first paragraph to

A. illustrate the history of credit card companies.
B. introduce the issuing of a new credit card.
C. show how working class families got affordable loans.
D. build up consumers' trust in Provident Financial.

It can be inferred from the passage that

A. the "code of silence" often helps protect guards from violence.
B. the governor's office has decided to give a new life to the prisons.
C. the solution to overpopulation in prisons lies in softening sentences.
D. the prison population calls for more prison-building programs.

According to the passage, California has the highest rate of returning prisoners because

A. the prisons in California are too crowded.
B. the prisons failed to rehabilitate the prisoners.
C. the prisoners can sleep in the gymnasiums and classrooms.
D. the prisoners are released after only three years of imprisonment.

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