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ID:9582-11680
We are on the wrong path of money worship
By Gao Qihui (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2010-06-24 10:24
Recently on a popular TV program If You Are The One on Jiangsu TV, a blind date reality show, young girls’ mercenary attitude toward marriage and men showing off their wealth sparked a wide discussion on the value outlook of young Chinese.
On this program, one woman directly asked a suitor, “Do you have money?” Another young woman, Ma Nuo, who has since become widely known as a gold digger, said: “I would rather cry in a BMW than smile on the back of my boyfriend’s bicycle.”
Although this TV prgram has come under fire for its vulgar content, it still attracts a large number of young viewers of marriageable age. For most young Chinese, the program just reflects the crude realities of Chinese society.
In today’s China, many women don’t want to marry anyone who doesn’t own a house and men believe that they won’t be respected and sought after by girls unless they are wealthy or will be one day. This money worship has somewhat dominated the developing trend of relationships. In a survey last year on Sohu.com, a popular Web portal similar to Yahoo, 73% of respondents said homeownership was a prerequisite for marriage.
When a woman is looking for her Mr. Right, it seems that wealth has become her only criterion. Many men who are not wealthy are defined as losers, especially by women. What a ridiculous thought! However, when we are criticizing today’s money worshiper, we should also notice the absence of a general moral guide in our society.
The current generation of young Chinese grew up during the era of reform and opening-up, when we were bombarded by slogans on materialism. We have plunged into the pursuit of material success without any regard for moral guidance and just simplified the definition of social development as economic achievement. Thus economic achievement became the only general pursuit of the whole society.
Under such circumstances, young Chinese naturally regard wealth as the only standard of success. This growing money worship is taking young Chinese in a dangerous direction that may lead to the degradation of our society.
ID:9582-11671
he changes hit a visitor right away. In newspapers ads, the tradition of parents seeking spouses for their offspring continues. But read those classified more closely and see the number that give an e-mail address or even a website for reply. And note all the telephone chat lines for everything from spicy film gossip to advice on cutting business deals. Want to celebrate at a spiffy eatery? Then make a reservation, for while the choice is staggering, the queues can be too. No, this is not Lan Kwai Fong, Boat Quay or the Ginza. It’s Delhi’s Pandan Market, Bombay’s Colaba and Banglore’s Gandhi Road. India is on fire—and its people know it, from the dotcom wallah to the man at the top. Says Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee: “Together we are building a strong and resurgent nation whose confident march forward is being keenly watched by the whole world. Let nothing be done that would slacken the momentum.”
In Line 2, “those classified” probably refers to each of the following EXCEPT
_________.
A. all newspaper advertisements
B. those advertisements which are classified
C. the small advertisements you put in a newspaper
D. the so-called want advertisements in America
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ID:9582-11686
For G-20, a struggle over growth and debt
By Howard Schneider Washington Post Staff Writer Sunday, June 27, 2010
TORONTO -- The world’s developed countries have built extensive public health systems, promised citizens a paycheck for life and erected a welter (i.e. disordered mixture) of protections around some industries and types of jobs. Now their leaders are conferring over a singular dilemma: how to take some of it back without undermining the economies they are trying to sustain.
In economic terms, it is a bit like creating a perpetual motion machine -- cutting tens of billions of dollars in public spending would almost certainly slow growth but is considered necessary to tame record levels of government debt. And in a series of recent reports, the International Monetary Fund has suggested that it might be just as tricky to demand unheard-of levels of coordination among the world’s major economies and require politicians to sustain what might prove to be a painful reform process for several years.
An IMF report to the Group of 20 major economies “has to go through a lot of contortions (i.e. adaptations or improvements)” to show that developed world debt can be brought down without undermining growth, said Eswar Prasad, a senior economist at the Brookings Institution and former IMF economist, who has reviewed the document. “They have been tweaking (i.e. to adapt sth.) their methods -- the message is that you need to have fiscal cut, but if you do it the right way you won’t have negative growth effects
The needed changes range from an overhaul of financial regulations to a retooling of world trade, topics U.S. officials mentioned at the start of the talks this weekend. President Obama pledged to pursue passage of a U.S.-South Korea free trade agreement by fall in hopes of boosting American exports, while Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said the pending approval of a U.S. financial overhaul package should be complemented by strong actions by other countries on issues such as the rules for bank capitalization.
The G-20 -- industrialized countries and major emerging powers that include China and India -- meets Sunday amid debate about the risks that public debt in the developed world poses to the global recovery and how to respond to it without creating another set of problems. Heading into the session, even some of the group’s closest allies seemed divided.
“This summit must be fundamentally about growth,” Geithner said on arriving in Canada, just hours after Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper emphasized the “strong consensus on the need for medium-term consolidation plans in advanced countries” -- in other words budget cutting.
Can the two be resolved?
The IMF has published a “Ten Commandments for Fiscal Adjustment in Advanced Economies” that includes a warning from its top economists to “obey these . . . and chances are high that you will achieve fiscal consolidation and sustained growth.”
The document acknowledges that the level of budget cutting being planned by the developed world is risky given the weakness in the world economy. Deep cuts are underway in Greece and Spain, and have been proposed in Britain and recommended for the United States and others to begin by next year.
But the document also contends that a commitment to more-balanced public spending will stabilize bond markets, bring down interest rates as governments borrow less, and encourage more private investment -- all “growth-friendly” results that will help offset any reduction in government budgets.
In addition, the agency says that for the process to work, budget cutting must be accompanied by a broad set of other reforms that would improve economic performance.
Public retirement and health programs are singled out: “You shall pass early pension and health care reforms as current trends are unsustainable” is commandment No. 5. Much of the projected increase in future public spending in developed countries is related to the aging of their populations, and changes such as an increase in the retirement age improve future balance sheets without cutting current spending.
Labor markets need to be overhauled to make it easier for people to find and change jobs or enter new markets; in recent reports on Greece and France, the agency singled out rules that protect retailers, pharmacists and others from competition. Product markets need to be deregulated. Taxes almost certainly need to increase.
And on top of all that, the world’s wealthiest nations will still need some help from emerging markets such as China that have benefited from large trade surpluses in recent years and tucked trillions of dollars of currency reserves into the vaults of their central banks. The emerging markets need to boost their own spending and shift to “internal demand” for future growth, and rely less on spending from developed nations, the IMF said.
Synchronizing those efforts on a global scale will be a task in itself. The G-20 asked the IMF to begin the process by collecting economic projections and policy plans from its members, and vetting (i.e.. monitor) them to see how they complement -- or conflict with -- each other, and square with (i.e. match) the IMF’s own forecasts.
According to officials who reviewed the IMF’s report, the developed countries appeared too optimistic in their expectations for growth and the recovery of the private sector and too timid in the political decisions being planned to restructure their economies.
That, according to one Canadian official, will be a centerpiece of the weekend’s discussions.
“Each country is coming in saying here is what we are going to do,” said the official, who is familiar with the talks but is not authorized to speak publicly. The IMF estimates that properly coordinated policies could add about $4 trillion and 30 million jobs to the world economy in coming years, and “we don’t want to leave $4 trillion on the table,” the official said.
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ID:9582-11720
Shanghai, for instance, exempts the children of revolutionary martyrs from paying tuition. ( )
A.charges a little for B. makes free charge for
C. reduces the charge for D. Both A and B
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ID:9582-11721
And these costs may be reduced or waived for students with limited family financial support as their parents are either both dead or are receiving subsidies from their work units. (
A. insisted on B. not enforced C. charged D. exempted
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ID:9582-11687(本题为引用材料试题,请根据材料回答以下问题)
What makes this article characteristic of a special feature?
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