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Ano: 2011 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: PM-SP Prova: VUNESP - 2011 - PM-SP - Soldado Voluntário XV |
Q724358 Geografia
A expressão “Menos crianças, mais idosos” revela aspectos sociais e demográficos da população mundial. Desse modo, é correto afirmar que
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Ano: 2011 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: PM-SP Prova: VUNESP - 2011 - PM-SP - Soldado Voluntário XV |
Q724357 Geografia

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A partir de conhecimentos sobre as formas de relevo, é correto afirmar que a imagem retrata

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Ano: 2011 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: PM-SP Prova: VUNESP - 2011 - PM-SP - Soldado Voluntário XV |
Q724351 História

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Esse desenho de Leonardo da Vinci relaciona-se

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Ano: 2011 Banca: VUNESP Órgão: PM-SP Prova: VUNESP - 2011 - PM-SP - Soldado Voluntário XV |
Q724336 Matemática

Um estudante registra diariamente o quanto ele recebe de seus pais para comprar lanche no colégio e o quanto ele gasta por dia. Os valores estão registrados na tabela.

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Ao término dessa semana, o saldo desse aluno era de

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Q724309 Inglês

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The Big Destructiveness Of The Tiny Bribe

Alexandra Wrage 03.01.2010

    The smallest bribes can be the most vexing. Not suitcases full of money and transfers to offshore accounts, but the thousands of everyday payments people make to Indian building inspectors, Chinese customs officials and Nigerian airport functionaries, just to get things done. They’re payments for routine government services that a government official is legally obliged to perform but for which he’s hoping to skim off a little extra.

    Unlike more serious bribes, these very modest payouts, formally known as “facilitating payments”, are not against the laws of the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand or South Korea, when made abroad. They’re illegal for Great Britain, but the Serious Fraud Office there has taken the extraordinary public position that they’re unlikely to give rise to a prosecution.

    Why don’t governments that lead the fight against large-scale bribery fall in line with what is already the practice of many major companies? They don’t want to outlaw such small-scale graft in foreign places, they say, because they don’t have the manpower to prosecute violators. By that logic, communities with just enough resources to handle murder and armed robbery would give a green light to shoplifting. You’d think a government could at least go after a few high-profile cases to set an example and a precedent. Permitting these smaller payments has to impede the effort to crack down on the larger ones. Companies know this.

    “Facilitating” bribes are not tips. Tipping is voluntary, and you decide to do it after a service has been rendered. You don’t pay it at the outset to induce the waiter to bring the food, and you can always go somewhere else to eat next time should the service be bad.

    Nor are they welfare for underpaid civil servants. If government workers are underpaid, we should compensate them for the cost of customs inspections or airport security by aboveboard means, through taxation and so forth. Payment to individuals not only slows service but also encourages entrepreneurial civil servants to increase their income by creating more and greater obstacles.

    Nor are they a mere distraction from the fight against bigger bribes. Rather, they fuel the problem. Junior officials who look for small bribes rise to higher positions by paying off those above them. Corruption creates pyramids of illegal payments flowing upward. Legalizing the base of the pyramid gives it a strong and lasting foundation.

    Nor are these payments legal where they’re made. They may not be banned by the wealthy countries mentioned above, but they are outlawed in the countries where they’re actually a problem. Do developed countries want to say they wouldn’t tolerate such payments at home but don’t care if they’re made abroad? And since they’re illegal in the countries where they’re paid, companies can’t put them on their books. The classic cover for a bribe is to call it a “consulting fee”, but that is a books and records violation that is illegal in any country.

(www.forbes.com. Adaptado.)

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1286: D
1287: D
1288: C
1289: A
1290: D