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Q2096257 Inglês
Text II

Global commerce 

    Driverless vehicles whizz across five new berths at Tuas Mega Port, which sits on a swathe of largely reclaimed land at the western tip of Singapore. Unmanned cranes loom overhead, circled by camera-fitted drones. The berths are the first of 21 due by 2027. When it is completed in 2040, the complex will be the largest container port on Earth, boasts PSA International, its Singaporean owner.
   Tuas is a vision of the future on two fronts. It illustrates how port operators the world over are deploying clever technologies to meet the demand for their services in the face of obstacles to the development of new facilities, from lack of space to environmental concerns. More fundamentally, the city-state’s investment, with construction costs estimated at $15bn, is part of a wave of huge bets by the broader logistics industry on the rising importance of Asia, and South-East Asia in particular. The IMF expects the region’s five largest economies—Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand—to be the fastest-growing bloc in the world by trade volumes between 2022 and 2027. The result is that the map of global commerce and the blueprints for its critical nodes are being simultaneously redrawn.

From: The Economist, January 14, 2023, pp. 57-58
The use of the verb “loom” in “Unmanned cranes loom overhead” (1st paragraph) helps build an atmosphere that is rather
Alternativas
Q2096256 Inglês
Text II

Global commerce 

    Driverless vehicles whizz across five new berths at Tuas Mega Port, which sits on a swathe of largely reclaimed land at the western tip of Singapore. Unmanned cranes loom overhead, circled by camera-fitted drones. The berths are the first of 21 due by 2027. When it is completed in 2040, the complex will be the largest container port on Earth, boasts PSA International, its Singaporean owner.
   Tuas is a vision of the future on two fronts. It illustrates how port operators the world over are deploying clever technologies to meet the demand for their services in the face of obstacles to the development of new facilities, from lack of space to environmental concerns. More fundamentally, the city-state’s investment, with construction costs estimated at $15bn, is part of a wave of huge bets by the broader logistics industry on the rising importance of Asia, and South-East Asia in particular. The IMF expects the region’s five largest economies—Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand—to be the fastest-growing bloc in the world by trade volumes between 2022 and 2027. The result is that the map of global commerce and the blueprints for its critical nodes are being simultaneously redrawn.

From: The Economist, January 14, 2023, pp. 57-58
The sentence “Driverless vehicles whizz across” (1st paragraph) introduces a sense of
Alternativas
Q2096255 Inglês
Text II

Global commerce 

    Driverless vehicles whizz across five new berths at Tuas Mega Port, which sits on a swathe of largely reclaimed land at the western tip of Singapore. Unmanned cranes loom overhead, circled by camera-fitted drones. The berths are the first of 21 due by 2027. When it is completed in 2040, the complex will be the largest container port on Earth, boasts PSA International, its Singaporean owner.
   Tuas is a vision of the future on two fronts. It illustrates how port operators the world over are deploying clever technologies to meet the demand for their services in the face of obstacles to the development of new facilities, from lack of space to environmental concerns. More fundamentally, the city-state’s investment, with construction costs estimated at $15bn, is part of a wave of huge bets by the broader logistics industry on the rising importance of Asia, and South-East Asia in particular. The IMF expects the region’s five largest economies—Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand—to be the fastest-growing bloc in the world by trade volumes between 2022 and 2027. The result is that the map of global commerce and the blueprints for its critical nodes are being simultaneously redrawn.

From: The Economist, January 14, 2023, pp. 57-58
The machines described in the first paragraph
Alternativas
Q2096254 Inglês
Text II

Global commerce 

    Driverless vehicles whizz across five new berths at Tuas Mega Port, which sits on a swathe of largely reclaimed land at the western tip of Singapore. Unmanned cranes loom overhead, circled by camera-fitted drones. The berths are the first of 21 due by 2027. When it is completed in 2040, the complex will be the largest container port on Earth, boasts PSA International, its Singaporean owner.
   Tuas is a vision of the future on two fronts. It illustrates how port operators the world over are deploying clever technologies to meet the demand for their services in the face of obstacles to the development of new facilities, from lack of space to environmental concerns. More fundamentally, the city-state’s investment, with construction costs estimated at $15bn, is part of a wave of huge bets by the broader logistics industry on the rising importance of Asia, and South-East Asia in particular. The IMF expects the region’s five largest economies—Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand—to be the fastest-growing bloc in the world by trade volumes between 2022 and 2027. The result is that the map of global commerce and the blueprints for its critical nodes are being simultaneously redrawn.

From: The Economist, January 14, 2023, pp. 57-58
The overall position of the article is rather
Alternativas
Q2096253 Inglês
Text II

Global commerce 

    Driverless vehicles whizz across five new berths at Tuas Mega Port, which sits on a swathe of largely reclaimed land at the western tip of Singapore. Unmanned cranes loom overhead, circled by camera-fitted drones. The berths are the first of 21 due by 2027. When it is completed in 2040, the complex will be the largest container port on Earth, boasts PSA International, its Singaporean owner.
   Tuas is a vision of the future on two fronts. It illustrates how port operators the world over are deploying clever technologies to meet the demand for their services in the face of obstacles to the development of new facilities, from lack of space to environmental concerns. More fundamentally, the city-state’s investment, with construction costs estimated at $15bn, is part of a wave of huge bets by the broader logistics industry on the rising importance of Asia, and South-East Asia in particular. The IMF expects the region’s five largest economies—Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand—to be the fastest-growing bloc in the world by trade volumes between 2022 and 2027. The result is that the map of global commerce and the blueprints for its critical nodes are being simultaneously redrawn.

From: The Economist, January 14, 2023, pp. 57-58
As regards Text II, analyse the assertions below:
I. The soil on which the port is being built was once parched. II. The industry is quite diffident about the success of the investment. III. From an international viewpoint the project described will have sweeping implications.
Choose the correct answer: 
Alternativas
Q2096252 Inglês

Text I 


Trust and audit


    Trust is what auditors sell. They review the accuracy, adequacy or propriety of other people’s work. Financial statement audits are prepared for the owners of a company and presented publically to provide assurance to the market and the wider public. Public service audits are presented to governing bodies and, in some cases, directly to parliament.

      It is the independent scepticism of the auditor that allows shareholders and the public to be confident that they are being given a true and fair account of the organisation in question. The auditor’s signature pledges his or her reputational capital so that the audited body’s public statements can be trusted. […]

    Given the fundamental importance of trust, should auditors not then feel immensely valuable in the context of declining trust? Not so. Among our interviewees, a consensus emerged that the audit profession is under-producing trust at a critical time. One aspect of the problem is the quietness of audit: it is a profession that literally goes about its work behind the scenes. The face and processes of the auditor are rarely seen in the organisations they scrutinise, and relatively rarely in the outside world. Yet, if we listen to the mounting evidence of the importance of social capital, we know that frequent and reliable contacts between groups are important to strengthening and expanding trust.

     So what can be done? Our research suggests that more frequent dialogue with audit committees and a more ambitious outward facing role for the sector’s leadership would be welcome. But we think more is needed. Audit for the 21st century should be understood and designed as primarily a confidence building process within the audited organisation and across its stakeholders. If the audit is a way of ensuring the client’s accountability, much more needs to be done to make the audit itself exemplary in its openness and inclusiveness.

    Instead of an audit report being a trust-producing product, the audit process could become a trust-producing practice in which the auditor uses his or her position as a trusted intermediary to broker rigorous learning across all dimensions of the organisation and its stakeholders. The views of investors, staff, suppliers and customers could routinely be considered, as could questions from the general public; online technologies offer numerous opportunities to inform, involve and invite.

    From being a service that consists almost exclusively of external investigation by a warranted professional, auditing needs to become more co-productive, with the auditor’s role expanding to include that of an expert convenor who is willing to share the tools of enquiry. Audit could move from ‘black box’ to ‘glass box’.

    But the profession will still struggle to secure trust unless it can stake a stronger claim to supporting improvement. Does it increase the economic, social or environmental value of the organisations it reviews? It is one thing to believe in the accuracy of a financial statement audit, but it is another thing to believe in its utility.


Adapted from: https://auditfutures.net/pdf/AuditFutures-RSA-EnlighteningProfessions.pdf

“Unless” in “unless it can stake a stronger claim to supporting improvement” (7th paragraph) introduces a(n)
Alternativas
Q2096251 Inglês

Text I 


Trust and audit


    Trust is what auditors sell. They review the accuracy, adequacy or propriety of other people’s work. Financial statement audits are prepared for the owners of a company and presented publically to provide assurance to the market and the wider public. Public service audits are presented to governing bodies and, in some cases, directly to parliament.

      It is the independent scepticism of the auditor that allows shareholders and the public to be confident that they are being given a true and fair account of the organisation in question. The auditor’s signature pledges his or her reputational capital so that the audited body’s public statements can be trusted. […]

    Given the fundamental importance of trust, should auditors not then feel immensely valuable in the context of declining trust? Not so. Among our interviewees, a consensus emerged that the audit profession is under-producing trust at a critical time. One aspect of the problem is the quietness of audit: it is a profession that literally goes about its work behind the scenes. The face and processes of the auditor are rarely seen in the organisations they scrutinise, and relatively rarely in the outside world. Yet, if we listen to the mounting evidence of the importance of social capital, we know that frequent and reliable contacts between groups are important to strengthening and expanding trust.

     So what can be done? Our research suggests that more frequent dialogue with audit committees and a more ambitious outward facing role for the sector’s leadership would be welcome. But we think more is needed. Audit for the 21st century should be understood and designed as primarily a confidence building process within the audited organisation and across its stakeholders. If the audit is a way of ensuring the client’s accountability, much more needs to be done to make the audit itself exemplary in its openness and inclusiveness.

    Instead of an audit report being a trust-producing product, the audit process could become a trust-producing practice in which the auditor uses his or her position as a trusted intermediary to broker rigorous learning across all dimensions of the organisation and its stakeholders. The views of investors, staff, suppliers and customers could routinely be considered, as could questions from the general public; online technologies offer numerous opportunities to inform, involve and invite.

    From being a service that consists almost exclusively of external investigation by a warranted professional, auditing needs to become more co-productive, with the auditor’s role expanding to include that of an expert convenor who is willing to share the tools of enquiry. Audit could move from ‘black box’ to ‘glass box’.

    But the profession will still struggle to secure trust unless it can stake a stronger claim to supporting improvement. Does it increase the economic, social or environmental value of the organisations it reviews? It is one thing to believe in the accuracy of a financial statement audit, but it is another thing to believe in its utility.


Adapted from: https://auditfutures.net/pdf/AuditFutures-RSA-EnlighteningProfessions.pdf

The opposite of quietness (3rd paragraph) is
Alternativas
Q2096250 Inglês

Text I 


Trust and audit


    Trust is what auditors sell. They review the accuracy, adequacy or propriety of other people’s work. Financial statement audits are prepared for the owners of a company and presented publically to provide assurance to the market and the wider public. Public service audits are presented to governing bodies and, in some cases, directly to parliament.

      It is the independent scepticism of the auditor that allows shareholders and the public to be confident that they are being given a true and fair account of the organisation in question. The auditor’s signature pledges his or her reputational capital so that the audited body’s public statements can be trusted. […]

    Given the fundamental importance of trust, should auditors not then feel immensely valuable in the context of declining trust? Not so. Among our interviewees, a consensus emerged that the audit profession is under-producing trust at a critical time. One aspect of the problem is the quietness of audit: it is a profession that literally goes about its work behind the scenes. The face and processes of the auditor are rarely seen in the organisations they scrutinise, and relatively rarely in the outside world. Yet, if we listen to the mounting evidence of the importance of social capital, we know that frequent and reliable contacts between groups are important to strengthening and expanding trust.

     So what can be done? Our research suggests that more frequent dialogue with audit committees and a more ambitious outward facing role for the sector’s leadership would be welcome. But we think more is needed. Audit for the 21st century should be understood and designed as primarily a confidence building process within the audited organisation and across its stakeholders. If the audit is a way of ensuring the client’s accountability, much more needs to be done to make the audit itself exemplary in its openness and inclusiveness.

    Instead of an audit report being a trust-producing product, the audit process could become a trust-producing practice in which the auditor uses his or her position as a trusted intermediary to broker rigorous learning across all dimensions of the organisation and its stakeholders. The views of investors, staff, suppliers and customers could routinely be considered, as could questions from the general public; online technologies offer numerous opportunities to inform, involve and invite.

    From being a service that consists almost exclusively of external investigation by a warranted professional, auditing needs to become more co-productive, with the auditor’s role expanding to include that of an expert convenor who is willing to share the tools of enquiry. Audit could move from ‘black box’ to ‘glass box’.

    But the profession will still struggle to secure trust unless it can stake a stronger claim to supporting improvement. Does it increase the economic, social or environmental value of the organisations it reviews? It is one thing to believe in the accuracy of a financial statement audit, but it is another thing to believe in its utility.


Adapted from: https://auditfutures.net/pdf/AuditFutures-RSA-EnlighteningProfessions.pdf

Text I suggests auditors should invest in more
Alternativas
Q2096249 Inglês

Text I 


Trust and audit


    Trust is what auditors sell. They review the accuracy, adequacy or propriety of other people’s work. Financial statement audits are prepared for the owners of a company and presented publically to provide assurance to the market and the wider public. Public service audits are presented to governing bodies and, in some cases, directly to parliament.

      It is the independent scepticism of the auditor that allows shareholders and the public to be confident that they are being given a true and fair account of the organisation in question. The auditor’s signature pledges his or her reputational capital so that the audited body’s public statements can be trusted. […]

    Given the fundamental importance of trust, should auditors not then feel immensely valuable in the context of declining trust? Not so. Among our interviewees, a consensus emerged that the audit profession is under-producing trust at a critical time. One aspect of the problem is the quietness of audit: it is a profession that literally goes about its work behind the scenes. The face and processes of the auditor are rarely seen in the organisations they scrutinise, and relatively rarely in the outside world. Yet, if we listen to the mounting evidence of the importance of social capital, we know that frequent and reliable contacts between groups are important to strengthening and expanding trust.

     So what can be done? Our research suggests that more frequent dialogue with audit committees and a more ambitious outward facing role for the sector’s leadership would be welcome. But we think more is needed. Audit for the 21st century should be understood and designed as primarily a confidence building process within the audited organisation and across its stakeholders. If the audit is a way of ensuring the client’s accountability, much more needs to be done to make the audit itself exemplary in its openness and inclusiveness.

    Instead of an audit report being a trust-producing product, the audit process could become a trust-producing practice in which the auditor uses his or her position as a trusted intermediary to broker rigorous learning across all dimensions of the organisation and its stakeholders. The views of investors, staff, suppliers and customers could routinely be considered, as could questions from the general public; online technologies offer numerous opportunities to inform, involve and invite.

    From being a service that consists almost exclusively of external investigation by a warranted professional, auditing needs to become more co-productive, with the auditor’s role expanding to include that of an expert convenor who is willing to share the tools of enquiry. Audit could move from ‘black box’ to ‘glass box’.

    But the profession will still struggle to secure trust unless it can stake a stronger claim to supporting improvement. Does it increase the economic, social or environmental value of the organisations it reviews? It is one thing to believe in the accuracy of a financial statement audit, but it is another thing to believe in its utility.


Adapted from: https://auditfutures.net/pdf/AuditFutures-RSA-EnlighteningProfessions.pdf

Based on Text I, mark the statements below as TRUE (T) or FALSE (F).
I. In auditing, taking heed of what other parties have to say needs to be downplayed. II. Auditors are generally unobtrusive when carrying out their jobs. III. Trust is obtained when auditors eschew straightforward statements.
The statements are, respectively,
Alternativas
Q2096248 Português
Um site especializado publicou o seguinte texto sobre uma das atribuições do auditor fiscal:
“Segundo o Art. 6º da Lei nº 10.593/2002 é atribuição dos ocupantes do cargo de Auditor-Fiscal da Receita Federal do Brasil: elaborar e proferir decisões ou delas participar em processo administrativo-fiscal, bem como em processos de consulta, restituição ou compensação de tributos e contribuições e de reconhecimento de benefícios fiscais.”
A elaboração de um texto supõe cuidados com aspectos diversos. Sobre a estruturação desse pequeno segmento textual, assinale a afirmativa correta.
Alternativas
Q2096247 Português
“Aquele candidato estava mexendo no celular; vou tomar a prova dele!”
Essa é uma afirmação de um fiscal de prova, que é formulada, passando de uma premissa diretamente a uma conclusão, assumindo como verdadeira uma ideia intermediária.
Assinale a opção que indica corretamente a ideia intermediária omitida. 
Alternativas
Q2096246 Português
Num artigo interessante sobre os impostos no Brasil, intitulado Sete fatos impressionantes sobre os impostos no Brasil, o autor, Emanuel Steffen, cita como um desses fatos:
“Não bastasse a complexidade existente, todos os dias são criadas mais 46 leis tributárias - Desde a promulgação da Constituição de 1988, o Brasil criou 320.343 leis tributárias. Sim: trezentos e vinte mil, trezentos e quarenta e três leis tributárias. Levando-se em conta o número de dias úteis no período, foram criadas 46 novas leis todos os dias, segundo um levantamento do IBPT. Se continuarmos nesse ritmo, nossa complexidade tributária só tende a piorar e complicar ainda mais os negócios do país, que já precisam seguir 40.865 artigos legais para poderem funcionar.”
O fato citado é considerado “impressionante” pelo autor do texto em função
Alternativas
Q2096245 Português
Observe o seguinte fragmento:
“Por exemplo no trânsito: Se o governo não quer que ultrapassemos certo limite de velocidade numa estrada, começa a aplicar multas para quem o ultrapassa. Como o dinheiro é a verdadeira linguagem universal, aquela que todos entendem em qualquer lugar do mundo, então de fato os motoristas começam a respeitar o limite de velocidade.”
Acerca desse segmento textual, assinale a afirmativa correta.
Alternativas
Q2096244 Português
A economia funciona na base dos incentivos ou dos desincentivos. Por isso, por sua impressionante capacidade de mobilização social, a economia se tornou um instrumento de governo. Se o governo precisa estimular algum comportamento, costuma cortar cobranças ou impostos. Se ele precisa frear algum comportamento, costuma aumentar os impostos naquele segmento ou inventar alguma taxa qualquer. Por exemplo no trânsito: Se o governo não quer que ultrapassemos certo limite de velocidade numa estrada, começa a aplicar multas para quem o ultrapassa. Como o dinheiro é a verdadeira linguagem universal, aquela que todos entendem em qualquer lugar do mundo, então de fato os motoristas começam a respeitar o limite de velocidade. Sob esse ponto de vista, o imposto de renda é uma grande punição. É um desestímulo ao empregado se esforçar para ganhar bem. Se você ganhar acima da alíquota máxima, ganha uma multa de quase 30% de seu salário. Parece ingenuidade minha, mas o absurdo me soa tão grave, que nem sei se não há nessa cobrança absurda de 27,5% sobre o salário de quem ganha acima de determinado valor, algum estímulo subentendido para que o sujeito largue o emprego e parta para o empreendedorismo. De um certo ponto de vista, o imposto de renda seria um estímulo ao empreendedorismo. Afinal, uma Pessoa Jurídica paga proporcionalmente muito menos imposto do que a Pessoa Física. O imposto de renda é das imposições governamentais mais truculentas e insanamente aceitas pela população que eu já ouvi falar. O imposto de renda é uma multa que se aplica a quem ganha bem. 
O imposto de renda e a economia do desincentivo (Ronaud.com)

O texto acima se insere entre os textos argumentativos. Uma das marcas desses textos é a necessidade de coerência lógica.
Assinale a opção em que a frase dada mostra incoerência.

Alternativas
Q2096243 Português
Todas as frases abaixo têm por tema a economia. Assinale a frase que está integralmente estruturada em linguagem lógica.
Alternativas
Q2096242 Português
Numa magnífica crônica intitulada Eu sei, mas não devia, a escritora Marina Colasanti diz o seguinte: 
A gente se acostuma a pagar por tudo o que deseja e o de que necessita. E a lutar para ganhar o dinheiro com que pagar. E a ganhar menos do que precisa. E a fazer fila para pagar. E a pagar mais do que as coisas valem. E a saber que cada vez vai pagar mais. E a procurar mais trabalho, para ganhar mais dinheiro, para ter com que pagar nas filas em que se cobra. 
Uma das características básicas da textualidade é a necessidade de coesão. Assinale a frase que não mostra relação temática com os segmentos anteriores.
Alternativas
Q2096241 Português
Observe o que nos diz o escritor Lima Barreto sobre o nosso país:
“Não há dúvida alguma que o Brasil é um país muito rico. Nós que nele vivemos não nos apercebemos bem disso, e até, ao contrário, o supomos muito pobre, pois a toda hora e a todo instante, estamos vendo o governo lamentar-se que não faz isto ou não faz aquilo por falta de verba. 
Nas ruas da cidade, nas mais centrais até, andam pequenos vadios, a cursar a perigosa universidade das sarjetas, aos quais o governo não dá destino, ou os mete num asilo, num colégio profissional qualquer, porque não tem verba, não tem dinheiro. É o Brasil rico… 
Surgem epidemias pasmosas, a matar e a enfermar milhares de pessoas, que vêm mostrar a falta de hospitais na cidade, a má localização dos existentes. Pede-se a construção de outros bem situados; e o governo responde que não pode fazer porque não tem verba, não tem dinheiro. E o Brasil é um país rico.”
Considerando-se o trecho de Lima Barreto como um exemplo de texto argumentativo, assinale a afirmativa correta sobre sua estrutura.
Alternativas
Q2096240 Português
Leia com atenção o pequeno texto abaixo:
“Pagamos mais impostos em remédios do que em revistas e filmes pornográficos - Sim, isso mesmo. Enquanto revistas eróticas sofrem uma taxação de 19%, nossos remédios possuem uma carga tributária de incríveis 34%. Além de dar prioridade ao conteúdo adulto, nosso sistema tributário ainda nos trata pior do que animais: segundo o Instituto Brasileiro de Planejamento e Tributação (IBPT), medicamentos veterinários possuem uma carga tributária de 13%, quase um terço dos impostos embutidos em remédios de uso humano.”
(Sete fatos impressionantes sobre os impostos no Brasil – Emanuel Steffen)
Nesse texto, a crítica realizada é a de que os impostos
Alternativas
Q2096239 Português

Leia o texto a seguir, adaptado de um site informativo:


“Impostos são tributos obrigatórios que o cidadão brasileiro (ou de qualquer outro país) paga para contribuir com as despesas administrativas do Estado. Entre essas despesas estão: saúde, educação, segurança, infraestrutura, alimentação e etc.


Como o próprio nome já diz, os pagamentos desses tributos são impostos pelo Governo. Quando o pagamento não é feito, ele pode gerar multas ou punições legais mais graves ao cidadão, como prisão ou congelamento de documentação. ”


Todos os segmentos abaixo, retirados do texto acima, mostram problemas gramaticais ou de expressão. Assinale o único segmento integralmente adequado.

Alternativas
Q2096238 Português
“Renda é o produto ou resultado do trabalho, do capital ou dos dois. De forma simples, um empregado que trabalha um mês recebe um salário que é o resultado da função que ele exerce. É como se ele “vendesse” sua atividade pelo salário. No caso do emprego do capital, o raciocínio é parecido: quando uma pessoa empresta dinheiro, ela não espera somente o pagamento do empréstimo, no mesmo valor. Ela possui a expectativa de receber os juros deste empréstimo, que são a remuneração do capital aplicado. Da mesma forma, o empresário, ao exercer sua atividade empresarial, não “troca” dinheiro. Ele investe seu capital na expectativa de auferir lucro – que é a remuneração da atividade empresarial, superior ao capital investido.”
A respeito desse segmento, assinale a afirmativa correta. 
Alternativas
Respostas
161: D
162: A
163: C
164: E
165: C
166: E
167: B
168: D
169: A
170: E
171: A
172: A
173: B
174: C
175: A
176: C
177: A
178: D
179: D
180: D