While there is no blueprint for transforming a largely government-controlled

游客2024-01-13  33

问题     While there is no blueprint for transforming a largely government-controlled economy into a free one, the experience of the United Kingdom since 1979 clearly shows one approach that works: privatization, in which state-owned industries are sold to private companies. By 1979, the total borrowings and losses of state-owned industries were running at about £ 3 billion a year. By selling many of these industries, the government has decreased these borrowings and losses, gained over £ 34 billion from the sales, and now re- ceives tax revenues from the newly privatized companies. Along with a dramatically improved overall economy, the government has been able to repay 12. 5 percent of the net national debt over a two-year period.
    In fact, privatization has not only rescued individual industries and a whole economy headed for disaster, but has also raised the level of performance in ev- ery area. At British Airways and British Gas, for example, productivity per employee has risen by 20 percent. At associated British Ports, labor disruptions common in the 1970’ s and early 1980’ s have now virtually disappeared. At British Telecom, there is no longer a waiting list — as there always was before privatization — to have a telephone installed.  Part of this improved productivity has come about because the employees of privatized industries were given the opportunity to buy shares in their own companies. They responded enthusiast i- cally to the offer of shares; at British Aerospace, 89 percent of the eligible work force bought shares; at Associated British Ports, 90 percent; and at British Telecom, 92 percent. When people have a personal stake in something, they think about it, care about it, work to make it prosper. At the National Freight Consortium, the new employee-owners grew so concerned about their company’s profits that during wage negotiations they actually pressed their union to lower its wage demands.
    Some economists have suggested that giving away free shares would pro- vide a needed acceleration of the privatization process. Yet they miss Thomas Paine’s point that "what we obtain too cheap we esteem too lightly. " In order for the far-ranging benefits of individual ownership to be achieved by owners, companies, and countries, employees and other individuals must make their own decisions to buy, and they must commit some of their own resources to the choice. [br] Which of the following can be inferred from the passage about the privatization process in the United Kingdom?

选项 A、It depends to a potentially dangerous degree on individual ownership of shares.
B、It conforms in its most general outlines to Thomas Paine’ s prescription for business ownership.
C、It was originally conceived to include some giving away of free shares.
D、It has been successful, even though privatization has failed in other countries.
E、It is taking place more slowly than some economists suggest is necessary.

答案 E

解析 关于英国的私有化:A.依赖于有潜在危险的个人持股份额。文中对英国的私有化是赞成态度,此选项显然不合。B.大致符合潘恩对企业所有的观点。潘恩的观点不是直接论述企业所有制,而是作者反对分发自由股的一个论据。C.原设想包括一些自由股。文中无,而且作者对此不同意。D.前半句对;后半句:别国私有化情况,本文未提。E.正确。比有些经济学家建议的要慢。文中L53—56有些经济学家建议发放自由股来加快此进程,但作者对此表示反对,由此推出该选项。
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