公共课考研英语英语考研英语模拟题25
题目内容

Sample TwoDirections:The following paragraphs are given in a wrong order. For Questions 46-50, you are required to reorganize these paragraphs into a coherent text by choosing from the list A-G to fill in each numbered box. The first and the last paragraphs have been placed for you in Boxes. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points)

2024-07-12

A.But the latest big revision to the statistics, published by the Commerce Department at the end of July, told a different story. It showed that personal savings rates are still on a downward trend, and have fallen particularly sharply in the past 18 months.

B.Bill Clinton likes to boast that America's economy is in its best shape for 30 years. In many ways he is right: the expansion has hummed along for more than six years, inflation is low, and unemployment has tumbled to 4.8%, a level not seen since the 1960s. Yet there is one glaring difference between today's economy and the glory days of a generation ago: saving, or rather the lack of it.

C.Personal saving is only one factor in America's overall rate of thrift. Firms make a contribution through corporate saving (in fact, many economists reckon the distinction between household and corporate saving is a rather arbitrary one), and the government, too, plays a big role. The bigger the deficit, the more it drags down overall savings rates.

D.At one level, this revision cleared up a bit of a mystery. Economists had been surprised at the lack of a “wealth effect”: people did not seem to be spending much more, despite huge appreciation in the value of their stock market assets. The new statistics show much higher consumption.

E.The bigger the deficit, the more it drags down overall savings rates.D.At one level, this revision cleared up a bit of a mystery. Economists had been surprised at the lack of a “wealth effect”: people did not seem to be spending much more, despite huge appreciation in the value of their stock market assets. The new statistics show much higher consumption.E.The picture is not pretty. Since the mid-1970s the long-trend in household saving has been downwards. Recently it appeared that this picture might be changing: personal saving rates in the mid-1990s appeared flat, or even on a slightly upward trend.

G.Last year Americans put only 4.3% of their disposable income in the piggy bank, just about half as much as their parents salted away in 1967. Unless this trend towards profligacy is stemmed, and preferably reversed, America's “miracle economy” will rest on shaky foundations. Less obvious, however, is how to do it.

H.A.But the latest big revision to the statistics, published by the Commerce Department at the end of July, told a different story. It showed that personal savings rates are still on a downward trend, and have fallen particularly sharply in the past 18 months.B.Bill Clinton likes to boast that America's economy is in its best shape for 30 years. In many ways he is right: the expansion has hummed along for more than six years, inflation is low, and unemployment has tumbled to 4.8%, a level not seen since the 1960s. Yet there is one glaring difference between today's economy and the glory days of a generation ago: saving, or rather the lack of it.C.Personal saving is only one factor in America's overall rate of thrift. Firms make a contribution through corporate saving (in fact, many economists reckon the distinction between household and corporate saving is a rather arbitrary one), and the government, too, plays a big role. The bigger the deficit, the more it drags down overall savings rates.D.At one level, this revision cleared up a bit of a mystery. Economists had been surprised at the lack of a “wealth effect”: people did not seem to be spending much more, despite huge appreciation in the value of their stock market assets. The new statistics show much higher consumption.E.The picture is not pretty. Since the mid-1970s the long-trend in household saving has been downwards. Recently it appeared that this picture might be changing: personal saving rates in the mid-1990s appeared flat, or even on a slightly upward trend.F.Last year Americans put only 4.3% of their disposable income in the piggy bank, just about half as much as their parents salted away in 1967. Unless this trend towards profligacy is stemmed, and preferably reversed, America's “miracle economy” will rest on shaky foundations. Less obvious, however, is how to do it.G.A decade ago, America's abysmal savings rates could be explained to a large extent by government profligacy. But now that the big and deficit has been tamed, and which the prospect of a balanced budget by 2002, it is time to turn attention to Americans themselves.Order:B→  41→  42→  43→  44→  45→  DA. B. C. D. E. F. G.

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