首页
登录
职称英语
(1) The American economy is in a befuddling state. Firms are on a six-year hi
(1) The American economy is in a befuddling state. Firms are on a six-year hi
游客
2023-10-28
36
管理
问题
(1) The American economy is in a befuddling state. Firms are on a six-year hiring spree that shows little sign of abating; payrolls swelled by an average of 190,000 a month between May and July. Competition for workers is pushing up wages. The median pay rise in the year to July was 3. 4% , according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Americans are spending that cash; in the second quarter, consumption per person grew at an annual pace of 5.5% , equaling its fastest growth in a decade. Yet real GDP is expanding by only 1.2% a year. The culprit seems to be business investment, which has fallen for three consecutive quarters. If firms are hiring and consumers are spending, why is investment weak?
(2) There are three potential explanations for this widespread reluctance to invest. The first is weak demand for the firms’ goods. This explains exporters’ restraint, given lacklustre global demand and a pricey dollar. But it makes less sense at home, with consumer spending strong, and firms happy to hire and to raise wages.
(3) The second is tighter credit. Since the Federal Reserve raised interest rates in December, the average rate banks charge firms to borrow is up by about half a percentage point. After five years of loosening standards, more banks have tightened than eased credit standards for business lending in 2016, according to a Fed survey. In February, financial-market turmoil caused credit spreads in bond markets, the best measure of credit conditions, to surge.
(4) Yet it is unlikely that slightly tighter credit has substantially crimped investment, because American firms are flush with cash. At the end of last year they had $1.7 trillion on hand, enough to pay for Hillary Clinton’s infrastructure plan six times over (though much of this cash is held overseas for tax reasons). Indeed, firms are accumulating cash at the fastest rate since July 2011, according to the Association for Finance Professionals, an industry group.
(5) That leaves the third explanation; that in spite of strong spending, slow trend growth is reducing opportunities for profitable long-term investments. On this view, the recent downturn in business investment was less of a cyclical blip than a sign of things to come.
(6) Economies get bigger when they add people or get more from their existing workforce. America is doing less of both. The Bureau of Labour Statistics projects that the labour force will grow by an average of 0.5% a year from 2014 to 2024, down from 1. 2% annually from 1994 to 2004, because of ageing baby-boomers and low fertility. And productivity growth has stalled. From 2005 to 2015, output per hour worked grew by only 1.3% a year, down from growth of 3% a year between 1995 and 2005. In the year to the second quarter of 2016, productivity actually fell, by 0.4%.
(7) Optimists argue that this is part of a lengthy hangover from the recession, which should soon end. One contributor to productivity is the amount of capital—for example, machinery or computers—that each worker has at their disposal. The recession sent this ratio soaring as firms laid off workers and left machines sitting idle. Why would firms invest again before they had replenished their payrolls? But this explanation is becoming less convincing. The capital-to-worker ratio returned to its long-run trend in 2014 (the last year for which data are available). It is past time for productivity growth to have recovered; instead, it is sinking further.
(8) Pessimists think the productivity problem is chronic. Technological advances, they say, are ever-less revolutionary: Uber is less of an advance than the car itself, the smartphone has not changed office work the way the PC did. Nonsense, reply "techno-optimists" , who foresee huge advances in machine learning and robotics.
(9) For now, the data support the pessimists. The best measure of technological advance is total factor productivity, which measures output after controlling for both the number of workers and the amount of capital. In 2015 it grew by just 0. 2% , compared with an average of 1. 1% in the two decades prior to the financial crisis.
(10) Businesses anticipating slower long-term growth cannot be expected to invest much. And politicians cannot easily conjure up technological progress. But they can boost competition, simplify taxes and regulation, and invest in infrastructure and education, all of which would help to raise American productivity. [br] Why do pessimists think productivity fall is chronic?
选项
A、High tech doesn’t make better changes.
B、It is part of the economic recession.
C、Productivity growth has stalled.
D、Productivity actually fell by 0.4% .
答案
A
解析
细节题。作者在原文第八段提到,悲观者认为生产力问题是长期的,诸如Uber和智能手机等高科技产品并没有超越或代替如汽车和PC等原有科技产品,生产力依然在持续下降,故[A]为答案。[B]是乐观者的看法,故排除;[C]、[D]是文中提到的事实,但并没有被悲观者用作长期衰退的证据,故排除。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3136980.html
相关试题推荐
TheDifferencesBetweenAmericanandBritishEnglishI.Introductio
TheDifferencesBetweenAmericanandBritishEnglishI.Introductio
TheDifferencesBetweenAmericanandBritishEnglishI.Introductio
TheDifferencesBetweenAmericanandBritishEnglishI.Introductio
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
AmericanLiteratureI.ThebeginningoftheAmericanli
随机试题
Fordays,Beijinghasbeentrappedunderablanketofyellow-browndusttha
[img]2016m3x/ct_eyyjsbz2015c_eyyjsbcloze_0047_20163[/img]Theancientartof
【B1】[br]【B9】[audioFiles]audio_eufm_j63_007(20082)[/audioFiles]whoisasimpor
Itisacuriousphenomenonofnaturethatonlytwospeciespracticetheart
教育目的是人制定的,所以是主观的
在调査对象中选择一部分重点企业进行非全面调查,调查的单位数目不多,但其标志值占
社会环境的主要构成要素不包括()。A.家庭 B.同辈群体 C.大众传媒
股东大会作为公司的决策机构,对于公司法人治理机制的完善具有重要作用。()
在实务操作上,失能收入损失保险不单独承保,它一般是作为()的附加险承保。A.
下列选项中,风险识别的主要内容有()。A、识别引起风险的主要因素 B、识别风
最新回复
(
0
)