[考研类试卷]英语专业(基础英语)模拟试卷7及答案与解析.doc
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1、英语专业(基础英语)模拟试卷 7 及答案与解析一、阅读理解0 Please read the following passages and choose A, B, C or D to best complete the statements about them.A new pecking orderFOR years leaders in continental Europe have been told by the Americans, the British and even this newspaper that their economies are sclerotic, ove
2、rregulated and too state-dominated, and that to prosper in true Anglo-Saxon style they need a dose of free-market reform. But the global economic meltdown has given them the satisfying triple whammy of exposing the risks in deregulation, giving the state a more important role and(best of all)laying
3、low les Anglo-Saxons.At the April G20 summit in London, Frances Nicolas Sarkozy and Germanys Angela Merkel stood shoulder-to-shoulder to insist pointedly that this recession was not of their making. Ms Merkel has never been a particular fan of Wall Street. But the rhetorical lead has been grabbed by
4、 Mr Sarkozy. The man who once wanted to make Paris more like London now declares laissez-faire a broken system. Jean-Baptiste Colbert once again reigns in Paris. Rather than challenge dirigisme, the British and Americans are busy following it: Gordon Brown is ushering in new financial rules and high
5、er taxes, and Barack Obama is suggesting that America could copy some things from France, to the consternation of his more conservative countrymen. Indeed, a new European pecking order has emerged, with statist France on top, corporatist Germany in the middle and poor old liberal Britain floored.It
6、is easy to dismiss this as political opportunism. But behind it sits a big debate not only about the direction of the European Union, the worlds biggest economic unit, but also about what sort of economy works best in the modern world. Thirty years after Thatcherism began to work its cruel magic in
7、Britain, continental Europe still tends to favour a larger state, higher taxes, heavier regulation of product and labour markets and a more generous social safety-net than freer-market sorts like the Iron Lady would tolerate. So what is the evidence for the continental model being better?The contine
8、ntal countries certainly have not escaped the recession: France may be doing a bit better than the worlds other big rich economies this year, but Germany, dragged down by its exporting industries, is doing significantly worse. Yet Mr Obama is right to admit that in some ways continental Europe has c
9、oped well. Tough job-protection laws have slowed the rise in unemployment. Generous welfare states have protected those who are always the first to suffer in a downturn from an immediate sharp drop in their incomes and acted as part of the “automatic stabilisers“ that expand budget deficits when con
10、sumer spending shrinks. In Britain, and to an even greater extent in America, people have felt more exposed.The downturn has also confirmed that the continental model has some strengths. France has a comparatively efficient public sector, thanks in part to years,of investment in better roads, more h
11、igh-speed trains, nuclear energy and even the restoration of old cathedrals. Nor is it just a matter of pumping in ever more taxpayers cash. By any measure Frances health system delivers better value for money than Americas costlier one. Germany has not just looked after its public finances more pru
12、dently than others; its export-driven model has forced its companies to hold down costs, making them competitive not only in Europe but also globally. By design as well as luck, much of continental Europe avoided the debt-fuelled housing bubbles that popped spectacularly in Britain and AmericaBut wi
13、ll it last? The strengths that have made parts of continental Europe relatively resilient in recession could quickly emerge as weaknesses in a recovery. For there is a price to pay for more security and greater job protection: a slowness to adjust and innovate that means, in the long run, less growt
14、h. The rules against firing that stave off sharp rises in unemployment may mean that fewer jobs are created in new industries. Those generous welfare states that preserve peoples incomes tend to blunt incentives to take new work. That large state, which helps to sustain demand in hard times, becomes
15、 a drag on dynamic new firms when growth resumes. The latest forecasts are that the United States and Britain could rebound from recession faster than most of continental Europe.Individual countries have specific failings of their own. Even if it did everything else right, Germanys overreliance on e
16、xports at the expense of consumer spending has proved a grave weakness in a downturn; its banks also look weak. The rate of youth unemployment in France is over 20% and it can be twice as high in the notorious banlieues where Muslim populations are concentrated. Italy and Spain have seen sharp rises
17、 in unit labour costs and their labour-productivity growth has stalled or gone into reverse. It may not be long before the fickle Mr Sarkozy is re-reading his Adam Smith.The truth is that the governments on both sides of the intellectual divide could go a long way to making their models work better,
18、 without changing their underlying beliefs. On the continental side, there is nothing especially socially cohesive about labour laws that favour insiders over outsiders, or rules that make the costs of starting a business excessive. Even Colbert might admit that Europes tax burdens are too onerous t
19、oday, particularly since they are likely to have to rise in the future to meet the looming cost of the continents rapidly ageing populations.For the liberals, even if the cycle swings back in their direction, the financial crisis and the recession have shown up defects in the way they too implemente
20、d their model. Getting regulation right matters as much as freeing up markets; an efficient public sector may count as much as an efficient private one; public investment in transport, schools and health care, done well, can pay dividends. The pecking order may change, but pragmatism and efficiency
21、will always count.1 Which of the following statements is TRUE?(A)America and The Continental Europe share the similar opinion on economic policy.(B) Britain and The Continental Europe share the similar opinion on economic policy.(C) Britain and America share the similar opinion on economic policy.(D
22、)They all share the similar opinion on economic policy.2 What does the term “laissez-faire“ refers to?(A)Self-regulating marketing system.(B) Government intervened marketing system.(C) Communism.(D)Gold standard system.3 Which of the following economic opinions is not similar to the others?(A)The st
23、atist.(B) The corporatist.(C) The Thatcherism.(D)The dirigisme.4 The following cases can be described as the evidence for the continental model being better, EXCEPT_.(A)Mr Obama admits that in some ways continental Europe has coped well(B) tough job-protection laws have slowed the rise in unemployme
24、nt(C) generous welfare states protected those who are always the first to suffer in a downturn(D)France has a comparatively efficient public sector5 Why dose the author say that “It may not be long before the fickle Mr Sarkozy is re-reading his Adam Smith.“?(A)Adam Smith is Mr. Sarkozys Favorite wri
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