Lê Quỳnh  Anh

Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the correct answer of each question.

Boots has reduced the price of "feminine" razors to bring them in line with men's. The chemist chain says it is just an isolated incident, but campaigners say it is part of a "pink tax" that discriminates against women. Who's right and what's the bigger story, ask Jessica McCallin and Claire Bates. Campaigners against what's been dubbed the "pink tax" - where retailers charge women more than men for similar products - are celebrating after Boots said it would change the price of some of its goods.

Stevie Wise, who launched the petition, was driven by a Times investigation which claimed that women and girls are charged, on average, 37% more for clothes, beauty products and toys. The New York Department of Consumer Affairs had compared the prices of 800 products with male and female versions and concluded that, after controlling for quality, women's versions were, on average, 7% more expensive than men's.

“This is a very exciting response,” says Wise. We are delighted with Boots' decision, but we now need to get them to look at all of their products, not just the ones highlighted in the petition. We hope this decision is just the first of many and we may broaden our campaign to focus on other retailers as well." Wise says that women have been getting in touch with examples of other price discrepancies from lots of companies and says there seems to be a particular problem with toys and clothes. Argos has been criticized for identical scooters that cost £5 more if they were pink rather than blue. Argos said it was an error that had already been rectified and that it would never indulge in differential pricing.

Among the examples sent to Wise was Boots selling identical child car seats that cost more in pink. Another retailer was selling children's balance bikes which cost more for a flowery print aimed at girls than a pirate print aimed at boys. But the latter example  already appears to have been tweaked on the retailer's website, albeit by applying a £10 discount to the flowery version.

When challenged over sexist pricing, both Levi's and Tesco argued that different versions of things could have different production costs even if appearing fairly similar. Prof Nancy Puccinelli says her research suggests that women are much more careful shoppers than men, better able to scrutinise adverts and pricing gimmicks. She wonders if women are perceiving more value in the more expensive products. “If products are separated into male and female sections far away from each other it's harder to scrutinise prices.” Such a situation could either be deliberate or accidental but the campaigners are not convinced.

There is an opportunity for some companies, argues Olchawski. “The finding shows the power of marketing in our lives, how it shapes our perception of what it means to be a man or a woman. Some companies could choose not to play into this, not to play into the stereotypes and rip women off, but launch products more in tune with moves toward gender equality.”

(Adapted from FELTS Academic Reading Test 6. Section 3)

 What of the following most accurately reflects the author's imply in the last paragraph?

 

 

A. The campaign succeed 

B. The price for the same products will change to guarantee the gender quality 

C. People will change their mind about gender quality 

D. It should not be balance in the price of the same product between men and women

Dương Hoàn Anh
11 tháng 4 2018 lúc 5:50

Đáp án B

Điều gì sau đây phản ảnh chính xác nhất tác giả ngụ ý trong đoạn cuối?

A. Chiến dịch thành công

B. Giá cho cùng một sản phẩm sẽ thay đổi để đảm báo bình đẳng giới

C. Mọi người sẽ thay đổi suy nghĩ về bình đẳng giới

D. Không nên cân bằng về giá của cùng một sản phẩm giữa nam và nữ

Căn cứ vào thông tin đoạn cuối

Tạm dịch: "Some companies could choose not to play into this, not to play into the stereotypes and rip women off, but launch products more in tune with moves toward gender equality."

(Một số công ty có tnể chọn không tham gia vào chiến dịch này (là chiến dịch pink-tax), không chạy theo các khuôn mẫu và gạt bỏ phụ nữ, nhưng vẫn tung ra các sản phẩm phù hợp hơn với các động thái hướng tới bình đẳng giới".)

=> Do đó, B là đáp án phù hợp nhất.

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