首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Pundits who want to sound judicious are fond of warning against generalizing. Each country is different, they say, and no one st
Pundits who want to sound judicious are fond of warning against generalizing. Each country is different, they say, and no one st
admin
2013-01-12
43
问题
Pundits who want to sound judicious are fond of warning against generalizing. Each country is different, they say, and no one story fits all of Asia. This is, of course, silly: all of these economies plunged into economic crisis within a few months of each other, so they must have had something in common.
In fact, the logic of catastrophe was pretty much the same in Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and South Korea. (Japan is a very different story.) In each case investors------mainly, but not entirely, foreign banks who had made short-term loans------all tried to pull their money out at the same time. The result was a combined banking and currency crisis: a banking crisis because on bank can convert all its assets into cash on short notice; a currency crisis because panicked investors were trying not only to convert long-term assets into cash, but to convert baht or rupiah into dollars. In the face of the stampede, governments had no good options. If they let their currencies plunge inflation would soar and companies that had borrowed in dollars would go bankrupt; if they tried to support their currencies by pushing up interest rates, the same firms would probably go bust from the combination of debt burden and recession. In practice, countries’ split difference------and paid a heavy price regardless.
Was the crisis a punishment for bad economic management? Like most clichés, the catchphrase "crony capitalism" has prospered because it gets at something real: excessively cozy relationships between government and business really did lead to a lot of bad investments. The still primitive financial structure of Asian business also made the economies peculiarly vulnerable to a loss of confidence. But the punishment was surely disproportionate to the crime, and many investments that look foolish in retrospect seemed sensible at the time.
Given that there were no good policy options, was the policy response mainly on the fight track? There was frantic blame-shifting when everything in Asia seemed to be going wrong: now there is a race to claim credit when some things have started to go right The IMF points to Korea’s recovery------and more generally to the fact that the sky didn’t fall after all-----a s proof that its policy recommendations were right Never mind that other IMF clients have done far worse, and that the economy of Malaysia------which refused IMF help, and horrified respectable opinion by imposing capital controls------also seems to be on the mend. Malaysia’s prime Minister, by contrast, claims full credit for any good news------even though neighbouring economies also seem to have bottomed out.
The truth is that an observer without any ax to grind would probably conclude that none of the policies adopted either on or in defiance of the IMF’s advice made much difference either way. Budget policies, interest rate policies, banking reform------whatever countries tried, just about all the capital that could flee, did. And when there was no mere money to run, the natural recuperative powers of the economies finally began to prevail. At best, the money doctors who purported to offer cures provided a helpful bedside manner, at worst, they were like medieval physicians who prescribed bleeding as a remedy for all ills.
Will the patients stage a full recovery? It depends on exactly what you mean by "full". South Korea’s industrial production is already above its pre-crisis level; but in the spring of 1997 anyone who had predicted zero growth in Korean industry over the next two years would have been regarded as a reckless doomsayer. So if by recovery you mean not just a return to growth, but one that brings the region’s performance back to something like what people used to regard as the Asian norm, they have a long way to go.
At the end of the passage, the writer seems to think that a full recovery of the Asian economy is______.
选项
A、due
B、remote
C、imaginative
D、unpredictable
答案
B
解析
本题问的是作者对亚洲经济全面复苏的看法。选项中,due:预期的,必然的;remote:遥远的,偏僻的;imaginative:想象的;unpredictable:不可预知的,出人意料的。在最后一段中,作者指出“they have a long way to go”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/FfHYFFFM
0
考博英语
相关试题推荐
Inthispart,youarerequiredtowriteacompositionentitledOrsBuildingANewSocialistCountrysideinnolessthan200word
Withprices______somuch,itisimpossibleforthecompanymanagertosticktotheoriginalbudget.
TheUnitedNationLawoftheSeaConferencewouldsoonproduceanocean-miningtreatyfollowingits______declarationin1970tha
Anyonewhodoubtsthatchildrenarebornwithahealthyamountofambitionneedspendonlyafewminuteswithababyeagerlylea
In______IwishIhadthoughtaboutalternativecoursesofaction.
Someteenagersharborageneralizedresentmentagainstsociety,which______themtherightsandprivilegesofadults,although
Inthelongrunagovernmentwillalwaysencroachuponfreedomtotheextenttowhichithasthepowertodoso.Thisisalmost
Inthispart,youarerequiredtowriteacompositionentitledTheEnergyProbleminnolessthan200words.Yourcompositionsh
Justiceinsocietymustincludebothafairtrialtotheaccusedandtheselectionofanappropriatepunishmentforthoseproven
Justiceinsocietymustincludebothafairtrialtotheaccusedandtheselectionofanappropriatepunishmentforthoseproven
随机试题
差旅型旅游者的需求特点包括()。
胎儿消化道畸形声像图表现,下列哪一项不正确
配制标准比色液的无机盐是
排水沟采用混凝土浇筑或浆砌片石砌筑时,要求满足的条件有()。
概算定额是以扩大的分部分项工程为对象编制的,其作用主要有()。
董事会审议批准的利润分配方案确定分配给投资者的现金股利或利润应确认应付股利。()
在布莱克一斯科尔斯期权定价模型中涉及无风险报酬率的估计,下列关于该模型中无风险报酬率的说法正确的有()。
有人说某地养石斛浇的是富含微量元素的矿泉水,似乎是说该地石斛的品质跟这种矿泉水有关。为了验证这个结论,下列哪种实验方法最可靠?
ASCII码其实就是
A、Itspowerbillreaches£9millionayear.B、Itsellsthousandsoflightbulbsaday.C、Itsuppliespowertoanearbytown.D、I
最新回复
(
0
)