问答题Passage 1  (1)______ There is a tendency to see Japan as a harbinger of all that is doomed in the economies of the euro zone and America--even though figures released on November 14th show its economy grew by an annualised 6% in the third quarter, rebo

题目
问答题
Passage 1  (1)______ There is a tendency to see Japan as a harbinger of all that is doomed in the economies of the euro zone and America--even though figures released on November 14th show its economy grew by an annualised 6% in the third quarter, rebounding quickly from the March tsunami and nuclear disaster.  Look dispassionately at Japan's economic performance over the past ten years, though, and "the second lost decade", if not the first, is a misnomer. Much of what tarnishes Japan's image is the result of demography—more than half its population is over 45—as well as its poor policy in dealing with it. (2)______  In aggregate, Japan's economy grew at half the pace of America's between 2001 and 2010. Yet if judged by growth in GDP per person over the same period, then Japan has outperformed America and the euro zone. In part this is because its population has shrunk whereas America's population has increased.  Though growth in labour productivity fell slightly short of America's from 2000 to2008, total factor productivity, a measure of how a country uses capital and labour, grew faster, according to the Tokyo-based Asian Productivity Organisation. Japan's unemployment rate is higher than in 2000, yet it remains about half the level of America and Europe.  Besides supposed stagnation, the two other curses of the Japanese economy are debt and deflation. Yet these also partly reflect demography and can be overstated. People often think of Japan as an indebted country. In fact, it is the world's biggest creditor nation, boasting 253 trillion ($3.3 trillion) in net foreign assets.  To be sure, its government is a large debtor; its net debt as a share of GDP is one of the highest in the OECD. (3)______ Social security expenditure doubled as a share of GDP between 1990 and 2010 to pay rising pensions and health-care costs. Over the same period tax revenues have shrunk.  (4)______ That gives it plenty of room to manoeuvre. Takatoshi Ito, an economist at the University of Tokyo, says increasing the consumption tax by 20 percentage points from its current 5%—putting it at the level of a high-tax European country—would raise 50 trillion and immediately wipe out Japan's fiscal deficit.  That sounds draconian. But here again, demography plays a role. Officials say the elderly resist higher taxes or benefit cuts, and the young, who are in a minority, do not have the political power to push for what is in their long-term interest. David Weinstein, professor of Japanese economy at Columbia University in New York, says the elderly would rather give money to their children than pay it in taxes. Ultimately that may mean that benefits may shrink in the future. "If you want benefits to grow in line with income, as they are now, you need a massive increase in taxes of about10% of GDP," he says.  (5)______ After all, falling prices give savers—most of whom are elderly—positive real yields even when nominal interest rates are close to zero. Up until now, holding government bonds has been a good bet. Domestic savers remain willing to roll them over, which enables the government to fund its deficits. Yet this comes at a cost to the rest of the economy. In short, Japan's economy works better for those middle-aged and older than it does for the young. But it is not yet in crisis, and economists say there is plenty it could do to raise its potential growth rate, as well as to lower its debt burden.[A] Falling tax revenues are a problem. The flip side, though, is that Japan has the lowest tax take of any country in the OECD, at just 17% of GDP.[B] Demography helps explain Japan's stubborn deflation, too, he says.[C] Even so, most Japanese have grown richer over the decade.[D] However, the public debt has been accrued not primarily through wasteful spending or "bridges to nowhere", but because of aging, says the IMF.[E] Young people also express their strong dissatisfaction towards economical injustice.[F] The Japanese say they suffer from an economic disease called “structural pessimism”. Overseas too,[G] In fact, the financial situation is not that bad during the last decade.
参考答案和解析
正确答案: 1.F 本空后面一句说“海外人也趋向于把日本看成是欧美遭遇的所有经济灾难的先行卒”。F项指出“日本人说他们自己患上了一种叫‘结构性悲观主义’的经济疾病”。意思表达最为接近。故选F。
2.C 本段开始说“凭借过去十年中日本的经济表现,‘第二个失去的十年’的说法失之偏颇”。第三段说“单看GDP日本比美国和欧元区的表现都要好”。C项“即便如此,大多数日本人还是在这十年里变得更富有了”最能连贯上下文。故选C。
3.D 空处之前说“日本政府的确是个大债务人,它的净债务占GDP的比例是经济合作与发展组织中最高的国家之一”。空处之后说“1990年至2010年间,社会保障开支在GDP中所占比例翻倍,用于支付不断增加的退休金和医疗费用”。D项“IMF称,然而日本公共债务的增长主要并不是因为挥霍金钱和修建‘不知通向何方的桥梁’,而是因为人口的老龄化。” 最能连贯上下文。故选D。
4.A 空处后面说“这也给日本政府很大的回旋余地。东京大学的经济学家伊藤隆敏指出:如果消费税从现在的5%提升20个百分点,即把日本消费税率提高到与高税收的欧洲国家相当的水平,这将筹集到500亿日元并将立即抹去日本的财政赤字。”说明实际上日本政府一直是低税收。故选A。
5.B 上一段讲的是人口结构对低税率的作用。空处后面介绍了通货紧缩情况下,日本年长者与年轻人不同的经济状况。B项说“人口结构同样帮助解释了日本顽固的通货紧缩”。另外通过判断这句话是谁讲的更容易解题。故选B。
解析: 暂无解析
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相似问题和答案

第1题:

The main purpose of this passage is to______.

A.introduce a“profoundly moving”children's book

B.tell that children's verbal capacity is very important

C.show that words are magic and they make children happy

D.show how the girl who tasted the honey on the book grew into a writer


正确答案:A
解析:主旨大意题。这篇文章主要介绍了Thank you,Mr. Falker这本书。书中主要讲述了Polacco早期的学习经历,这是一本意义深刻、感人的儿童书。因此,A项符合题意。

第2题:

Passage 1
Earlier this year, when America first sneezed, the European Central Bank (along with most private-sector economists) argued that the euro area was insulated from America's slowdown and had little to worry about. This seems to have wrong. In Germany there are fears about recession as business investment and retail sales tumble. Recent figures confirmed that Germany’s GDP stagnated in the second quarter. Italy's GDP fell in the second quarter, and although growth has held up better in France and Spain, the growth in the euro area as a whole was close to zero in the quarter. Nobody is forecasting an actual recession in the euro area this year, but it is no longer expected to provide an engine for world growth.
As for Japan, it is probably already in recession. Japan's GDP grew slightly in the first quarter. Persistent deflation continues to be a severe problem. A revised measure of Japan’s consumer-price index, to be published soon, is likely to show that deflation is worse than had been thought.

What was the economic situation in France and Spain?

A. Much better
B. Somewhat better.
C. Close to zero.
D. Much worse.

答案:B
解析:

第3题:

The author uses figures in Paragraph 2 to show _______.

A. the tendency of cutting household waste

B. the increase of packaging recycling

C. the rapid growth of super markets

D. the fact of packaging overuse


正确答案:D

作者用意猜测题。根据作者在文中使用的数字可知,作者使用数字的目的是为了让读者清楚地理解过度包装的现实问题,所以D项正确。

第4题:

Passage 1
Earlier this year, when America first sneezed, the European Central Bank (along with most private-sector economists) argued that the euro area was insulated from America's slowdown and had little to worry about. This seems to have wrong. In Germany there are fears about recession as business investment and retail sales tumble. Recent figures confirmed that Germany’s GDP stagnated in the second quarter. Italy's GDP fell in the second quarter, and although growth has held up better in France and Spain, the growth in the euro area as a whole was close to zero in the quarter. Nobody is forecasting an actual recession in the euro area this year, but it is no longer expected to provide an engine for world growth.
As for Japan, it is probably already in recession. Japan's GDP grew slightly in the first quarter. Persistent deflation continues to be a severe problem. A revised measure of Japan’s consumer-price index, to be published soon, is likely to show that deflation is worse than had been thought.

Which of the following is NOT TRUE about Japan’s economy?

A. It is perhaps already in decline.
B. Japan`s GDP grew slightly in the first quarter.
C. Deflation continues to be a severe problem.
D. t is worse than that of US and European.

答案:D
解析:

第5题:

Passage 1
Earlier this year, when America first sneezed, the European Central Bank (along with most private-sector economists) argued that the euro area was insulated from America's slowdown and had little to worry about. This seems to have wrong. In Germany there are fears about recession as business investment and retail sales tumble. Recent figures confirmed that Germany’s GDP stagnated in the second quarter. Italy's GDP fell in the second quarter, and although growth has held up better in France and Spain, the growth in the euro area as a whole was close to zero in the quarter. Nobody is forecasting an actual recession in the euro area this year, but it is no longer expected to provide an engine for world growth.
As for Japan, it is probably already in recession. Japan's GDP grew slightly in the first quarter. Persistent deflation continues to be a severe problem. A revised measure of Japan’s consumer-price index, to be published soon, is likely to show that deflation is worse than had been thought.

The best title for the passage is ___.

A. The world economic situation.
B. The world economic recession.
C. The worse world economic situation.
D. The reason for world economic recession.

答案:B
解析:

第6题:

A programmed computer begins to show on its screen the figures you need

A.to be switched on

B.when switched on

C.switching on

D.being switche don


正确答案:B
when switched on是个省略了“it is”的时间状语从句,意思是“当它被打开时”。A.to be switched on是不定式的被动式,不能表示时间;C.switching on是现在分词,表示主动;D.是现在分词的被动式,但放在句尾不能表示时间。

第7题:

Passage 1
Earlier this year, when America first sneezed, the European Central Bank (along with most private-sector economists) argued that the euro area was insulated from America's slowdown and had little to worry about. This seems to have wrong. In Germany there are fears about recession as business investment and retail sales tumble. Recent figures confirmed that Germany’s GDP stagnated in the second quarter. Italy's GDP fell in the second quarter, and although growth has held up better in France and Spain, the growth in the euro area as a whole was close to zero in the quarter. Nobody is forecasting an actual recession in the euro area this year, but it is no longer expected to provide an engine for world growth.
As for Japan, it is probably already in recession. Japan's GDP grew slightly in the first quarter. Persistent deflation continues to be a severe problem. A revised measure of Japan’s consumer-price index, to be published soon, is likely to show that deflation is worse than had been thought.

What does the 1st sentence mean?

A. Earlier this year, America suffered from a cold.
B. The European Central Bank believed it wouldn't be affected by US.
C. The European Central Bank had little to worry about.
D. The euro area was safe and sound.

答案:B
解析:

第8题:

Your company has an active directory forest that has five domains. All DNS servers are domain controllers. You need to ensure that users from all domains are able to access a web server named App1 by browsing http://App1. What should you do?()

A.Configure and enable DFS-R on the App1 Web Server.

B.Create a host (AAAA) record for the App1 Web server in the DNS zone for the forest root domain.

C.Create a zone named GlobalNames on a DNS server. Replicate the GloballNames zone to all domain controllers in the forest. Create a host (A) record for the App1 Web server in the zone.

D.Create a zone named LegacyWNS on a DNS server. Replicate the LegacyWNS zone to all domain controllers in the forest. Create a host (A) record for the App1 Web server in the zone.


参考答案:C

第9题:

Passage 1
Earlier this year, when America first sneezed, the European Central Bank (along with most private-sector economists) argued that the euro area was insulated from America's slowdown and had little to worry about. This seems to have wrong. In Germany there are fears about recession as business investment and retail sales tumble. Recent figures confirmed that Germany’s GDP stagnated in the second quarter. Italy's GDP fell in the second quarter, and although growth has held up better in France and Spain, the growth in the euro area as a whole was close to zero in the quarter. Nobody is forecasting an actual recession in the euro area this year, but it is no longer expected to provide an engine for world growth.
As for Japan, it is probably already in recession. Japan's GDP grew slightly in the first quarter. Persistent deflation continues to be a severe problem. A revised measure of Japan’s consumer-price index, to be published soon, is likely to show that deflation is worse than had been thought.

what were Germany and Italy's GDP in the second quarter?

A. stagnated
B. fell
C. suffered
D. halted and decreased

答案:D
解析:

第10题:

Text 4 Will the European Union make it?The question would have sounded strange not long ago.Now even the project's greatest cheerleaders talk of a continent facing a“Bermuda triangle”of debt,population decline and lower growth.As well as those chronic problems,the EU faces an acute crisis in its economic core,the 16 countries that use the single currency.Markets have lost faith that the euro zone's economies,weaker or stronger,will one day converge thanks to the discipline of sharing a single currency,which denies uncompetitive members the quick fix of devaluation.Yet the debate about how to save Europe's single currency from disintegration is stuck.It is stuck because the euro zone's dominant powers,France and Germany,agree on the need for greater harmonization within the euro zone,but disagree about what to harmonies.Germany thinks the euro must be saved by stricter rules on borrow,spending and competitiveness,backed by quasiautomatic sanctions for governments that do not obey.These might include threats to freeze EU funds for poorer regions and EU megaprojects and even the suspension of a country's voting rights in EU ministerial councils.It insists that economic coordination should involve all 27 members of the EU club,among whom there is a small majority for freemarket liberalism and economic rigour;in the inner core alone,Germany fears,a small majority favour French interference.A“southern”camp headed by French wants something different:“European economic government”within an inner core of eurozone members.Translated,that means politicians intervening in monetary policy and a system of redistribution from richer to poorer members,via cheaper borrowing for governments through common Eurobonds or complete fiscal transfers.Finally,figures close to the France government have murmured,eurozone members should agree to some fiscal and social harmonization:e.g.,curbing competition in corporatetax rates or labour costs.It is too soon to write off the EU.It remains the world's largest trading block.At its best,the European project is remarkably liberal:built around a single market of 27 rich and poor countries,its internal borders are far more open to goods,capital and labour than any comparable trading area.It is an ambitious attempt to blunt the sharpest edges of globalization,and make capitalism benign.
Regarding the future of the EU,the author seems to feel____

A.pessimistic
B.desperate
C.conceited
D.hopeful

答案:D
解析:
态度题【命题思路】这是一道态度题。态度有正向答案,也有负向答案,需要对文章最后一段的信息进行锁定,从而推理判断得出答案。【直击答案】根据题干信息定位到最后一段首句“It is too soon to write off the EU.”其中动词短语“write off”的意思是“取消;认定……失败”。因此这句话的意思是“认定欧盟失败还为时过早”。由此判断得出作者对欧盟的态度很乐观,根据答案给出的备选选项,只有D项“有希望的”与作者的态度一致,故D项正确。

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