GMAT综合阅读全真题之一

2022-05-31 18:10:17

  在GMAT考试中我们应该如何应对GMAT考试中出现的一些问题呐?本文小编就GMAT考试中的阅读方面的真题和大家做一个分享,大家可以根据此类题型更好的帮助大家应对GMAT考试的一系列问题,最终也祝愿大家都能取得一个不错的成绩。

  Recent years have brought minority-owned businesses in the United States unprecedented opportunities—as well as new and significant risks. Civil rights activists have long argued that one of the principal reasons why Blacks, Hispanics, and other minority groups have difficulty establishing themselves in business is that they lack access to the sizable orders and subcontracts that are generated by large companies. Now Con

  Corporate response appears to have been substantial. According to figures collected in 1977, the total of corporate contracts with minority businesses rose from $77 million in 1972 to $1.1 billion in 1977. The projected total of corporate contracts with minority businesses for the early 1980’s is estimated to be over 53 billion per year with no letup anticipated in the next decade. Promising as it is for minority businesses, this increased patronage poses dangers for them, too. First, minority firms risk expanding too fast and overextending themselves financially, since most are small concerns and, unlike large businesses, they often need to make substantial investments in new plants, staff, equipment, and the like in order to perform work subcontracted to them. If, thereafter, their subcontracts are for some reason reduced, such firms can face potentially crippling fixed expenses. The world of corporate purchasing can be frustrating for small entrepreneurs who get requests for elaborate formal estimates and bids. Both consume valuable time and resources, and a small company’s efforts must soon result in orders, or both the morale and the financial health of the business will suffer.

  A second risk is that White-owned companies may seek to cash in on the increasing apportionments through formation of joint ventures with minority-owned concerns. Of course, in many instances there are legitimate reasons for joint ventures; clearly, White and minority enterprises can team up to acquire business that neither could acquire alone. But civil rights groups and minority business owners have complained to ConGREss about minorities being set up as “fronts” with White backing, rather than being accepted as full partners in legitimate joint ventures.

  Third, a minority enterprise that secures the business of one large corporate customer often runs the danger of becoming—and remaining—dependent. Even in the best of circumstances, fierce competition from larger, more established companies makes it difficult for small concerns to broaden their customer bases: when such firms have nearly guaranteed orders from a single corporate benefactor, they may truly have to struggle against complacency arising from their current success.

  1. The primary purpose of the passage is to

  (A) present a commonplace idea and its inaccuracies

  (B) describe a situation and its potential drawbacks

  (C) propose a temporary solution to a problem

  (D) analyze a frequent source of disaGREement

  (E) explore the implications of a finding

  2. The passage supplies information that would answer which of the following questions?

  (A) What federal agencies have set percentage goals for the use of minority-owned businesses in public works contracts?

  (B) To which government agencies must businesses awarded federal contracts report their efforts to find minority subcontractors?

  (C) How widespread is the use of minority-owned concerns as “fronts” by White backers seeking to obtain subcontracts?

  (D) How many more minority-owned businesses were there in 1977 than in 1972?

  (E) What is one set of conditions under which a small business might find itself financially overextended?

  3. According to the passage, civil rights activists maintain that one disadvantage under which minority-owned businesses have traditionally had to labor is that they have

  (A) been especially vulnerable to governmental mismanagement of the economy

  (B) been denied bank loans at rates comparable to those afforded larger competitors

  (C) not had sufficient opportunity to secure business created by large corporations

  (D) not been able to advertise in those media that reach large numbers of potential customers

  (E) not had adequate representation in the centers of government power

  4. The passage suggests that the failure of a large business to have its bids for subcontracts result quickly in orders might cause it to

  (A) experience frustration but not serious financial harm

  (B) face potentially crippling fixed expenses

  (C) have to record its efforts on forms filed with the government

  (D) increase its spending with minority subcontractors

  (E) revise its procedure for making bids for federal contracts and subcontracts

  5. The author implies that a minority-owned concern that does the GREater part of its business with one large corporate customer should

  (A) avoid competition with larger, more established concerns by not expanding

  (B) concentrate on securing even more business from that corporation

  (C) try to expand its customer base to avoid becoming dependent on the corporation

  (D) pass on some of the work to be done for the corporation to other minority-owned concerns

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