单选题
Food Inflation Kept Hidden in Tinier Bags

Chips are disappearing from bags, candy from boxes and vegetables from cans.
As an expected increase in the cost of raw materials looms for late summer, consumers are beginning to encounter shrinking food packages.
With unemployment still high, companies in recent months have tried to hide price increases by selling their products in tiny and tinier packages. So far, the changes are most visible at the grocery store, where shoppers are paying the same amount, but getting less.
For Lisa Stauber, stretching her budget to feed her nine children in Houston often requires careful monitoring at the store. Recently, when she cooked her usual three boxes of pasta for a big family dinner, she was surprised by a smaller yield, and she began to suspect something was up.
"Whole wheat pasta had gone from 16 ounces to 13.25 ounces," she said. "I bought three boxes and it wasn't enough—that was a little embarrassing. I bought the same amount I always buy, I just didn't realize it, because who reads the sizes all the time?"
Ms. Stauber, 33, said she began inspecting her other purchases, aisle by aisle. Many canned vegetables dropped to 13 or 14 ounces from 16; boxes of baby wipes went to 72 from 80; and sugar was stacked in 4-pound, not 5-pound, bags, she said.
Five or so years ago, Ms. Stauber bought 16-ounce cans of com. Then they were 15.5 ounces, then 14.5 ounces, and the size is still dropping. "The first time I've ever seen an 11-ounce can of corn at the store was about three weeks ago, and I was just floored," she said. "It's sneaky, because they figure people won't know."
In every economic downturn in the last few decades, companies have reduced the size of some products, disguising price increases and avoiding comparisons on same-size packages, before and after an increase. Each time, the marketing campaigns are coy; this time, the smaller versions are "greener" (packages good for the environment) or more "portable" (little carry bags for the takeout lifestyle) or "healthier" (fewer calories).
Where Companies cannot change sizes—as in clothing or appliances—they have warned that prices will be going up, as the costs of cotton, energy, grain and other raw materials are rising.
"Consumers are generally more sensitive to changes in prices than to changes in quantity," John T. Gourville, a marketing professor at Harvard Business School, said. "And companies try to do it in such a way that you don't notice, maybe keeping the height and width the same, but changing the depth so the silhouette (轮廓) of the package on the shelf looks the same. Or sometimes they add more air to the chips bag or a scoop in the bottom of the peanut butter jar so it looks the same size."
Thomas J. Alexander, a finance professor at Northwood University, said that businesses had little choice these days when faced with increases in the costs of their raw goods. "Companies only have pricing power when wages are also increasing, and we're not seeing that right now because of the high unemployment," he said.
Most companies reduce products quietly, hoping consumers are not reading labels too closely.
But the downsizing keeps occurring. A can of Chicken of the Sea albacore tuna is now packed at 5 ounces, instead of the 6-ounce version still on some shelves, and in some cases, the 5-ounce can costs more than the larger one. Bags of Doritos, Tostitos and Fritos now hold 20 percent fewer chips than in 2009, though a spokesman said those extra chips were just a "limited time" offer.
Trying to keep customers from feeling cheated, some companies are introducing new containers that, they say, have terrific advantages—and just happen to contain less product.
Kraft is introducing "Fresh Stacks" packages for its Nabisco Premium saltines and Honey Maid graham crackers. Each has about 15 percent fewer crackers than the standard boxes, but the price has not changed. Kraft says that because the Fresh Stacks include more sleeves of crackers, they are more portable and "the packaging format offers the benefit of added freshness," said Basil T. Maglaris, a Kraft spokesman, in an e-mail.
And Procter & Gamble is expanding its "Future Friendly" products, which it promotes as using at least 15 percent less energy, water or packaging than the standard ones.
"They are more environmentally friendly, that's true—but they're also smaller," said Paula Rosenblum, managing partner for retail systems research at Focus.com, an online specialist network. "They announce it as great new packaging, and in fact what it is is smaller packaging, smaller amounts of the product," she said.
Or marketers design a new shape and size altogether, complicating any effort to comparison shop. The unwrapped Reese's Minis, which were introduced in February, are smaller than the foil-wrapped Miniatures. They are also more expensive—$0.57 an ounce at FreshDirect, versus $0.37 an ounce for the individually wrapped.
At H. J. Heinz, prices on ketchup, condiments, sauces and Ore-Ida products have already gone up, and the company is selling smaller-than-usual versions of condiments, like 5-ounce bottles of items like Heinz 57 Sauce sold at places like Dollar General.
"I have never regretted raising prices in the face of significant cost pressures, since we can always course-correct if the outcome is not as we expected," Heinz's chairman and chief executive, William R. Johnson, said last month.
While companies have long adjusted package sizes to appeal to changing tastes, from supersizes to 100-calorie packs, the recession drove a lot of corporations to think small. The standard size for Edy's ice cream went from 2 liters to 1.5 in 2008. And Tropicana shifted to a 59-ounce Carton rather than a 64-ounce one last year, after the cost of oranges rose.
With prices for energy and for raw materials like corn, cotton and sugar creeping up and expected to surge later this year, companies are barely bothering to cover up the shrinking packs.
"Typically, the product manufacturers are doing this slightly ahead of the perceived inflationary issues," Ms. Rosenblum said. "Lately, it hasn't been subtle—I mean, they've been shrinking by noticeable amounts."
That can work to a company's benefit. In the culture of thinness, smaller may be a selling point. It lets retailers honestly claim, for example, that a snack package contains fewer calories—without having to change the ingredients a smidge.
"For indulgences like ice cream, chocolate and potato chips, consumers may say "I don't mind getting a little bit less because I shouldn't be consuming so much anyway,' " said Professor Gourville. "That's a harder argument to make with something like diapers or orange juice."
But even while companies blame the recession for smaller packages, they rarely increase sizes in good times, he said.
He traced the shrinking package trends to the late 1980s, when companies like Chock full o'Nuts downsized the one-pound tin of ground coffee to 13 ounces. That shocked consumers, for whom a pound of coffee had been as standard a purchase unit as a dozen eggs or a six-pack of beer, he said.
Once the economy rebounds, he said, a new "jumbo" size product typically emerges, at an even higher cost per ounce. Then the gradual shrinking process of all package sizes begins anew, he said.
"It's a continuous cycle, where at some point the smallest package offered becomes so small that perhaps they're phased out and replaced by the medium-size package, which has been shrunk down," he said.

单选题 According to the author, why are the food companies beginning to change packages?
A. They would like to help people save more in shopping.
B. They think the prices for raw goods are likely to go up very soon.
C. They want to increase the visibility of their products.
D. They expect that the cost of raw materials will plunge this year.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] food; are beginning; packages
[定位处] 第二段
[解析] 该段提到,自夏末以来,由于(商家)预料到原材料的成本可能上升,消费者们开始买到包装缩水的食品。由此可知,食品公司之所以改变食品包装是因为他们认为原材料的价格可能会上涨,故答案为[B]。[D]中提到的plunge(下降)与文中提到的increase(上涨)相反,故排除。
[设题分析] 因果处设题。本题首先需要理解顾客买到包装缩水的食品与食品公司改变包装之间的同义转述,再由why与As之间的对照关系即可确定答案。
单选题 After inspecting the things she purchased, Ms. Stauber found that ______.
A. the prices have dropped
B. they have shorter shelf life
C. they are of worse quality
D. their sizes have decreased
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】[解析] inspecting; purchased;Ms. Stauber
[定位处] 第六段
[解析] 该段首先提到Ms. Stauber...began inspecting her other purchases,然后举例介绍她的发现:许多罐装蔬菜都从16盎司减少到13或14盎司;盒装婴儿纸巾从80盎司降到72盎司:每包糖的分量也变成了4盎司,而不是5盎司。由这些具体的数字变化可知,产品的分量减少了,故答案为[D]。
[设题分析] 举例处/数字处设题。本题解题的关键是对Ms.Stauber所举例子中的具体数字变化进行概括总结。
单选题 What do businesses tend to do in economic downturn?
A. Bring down the prices of some products.
B. Use more healthy materials for the packaging.
C. Hide price rises by downsizing products.
D. Make their products attractively packaged.
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] economic downturn
[定位处] 第八段首句
[解析] 该句主要介绍了经济下滑时商家的惯常做法,[C]中的Hide price rises与该句提到的disguising price increases对应,downsizing products与reduced the size of some products对应,故答案为[C]。该段末句提到this time,the smaller versions are..."healthier" (fewer calories), 由此可知,more healthy materials for packaging并不是商家经常的做法,故排除[B]。
[设题分析] 目的状语处设题。本题很容易定位,解题关键是理解[C]中的方式状语是对该句动名词作目的状语结构的同义转化。
单选题 John T. Gourville suggested that consumers are more likely to notice it if ______.
A. the prices of the goods change
B. the quality of the products improves
C. the packages take a different look
D. the weights of foods turn lighter
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] John T.Gourville; customers
[定位处] 第十段首句
[解析] 题干中的John T Gourville suggested与该句提到的John T.Gourville...said对应,consumers are more likely to notice与Consumers are generally more sensitive to对应,[A]the prices of the goods change与changes in prices对应,故答案为[A]。
[设题分析] 引言处/比较处设题。本题用it作形式宾语,把比较的对象之一changes in prices转化为if引导的条件句。
单选题 What stops companies raising product prices at present according to Thomas J. Alexander?
A. Increasing wages.
B. High unemployment.
C. High cost of raw materials.
D. The rebounding economy.
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】[解析] Thomas J.Alexander
[定位处] 第十一段末句
[解析] 该句提到了Thomas J. Alexander的看法:只有当工资上升时,厂家才能自由地公开提价,但是,由于现在的高失业率,我们现在看到厂家还无法这么做。由此可知,Thomas J.Alexander认为高失业率导致人们工资没有上涨,从而影响商家提高价格,故答案为[B]。[A]是厂家提价的条件,故排除。
[设题分析] 观点处/因果处设题。本题解题关键是理解“高失业率”影响“工资的增长”,而“工资的增长”影响自由提价,从而推导出“高失业率”影响公司提高产品价格。
单选题 According to Procter & Gamble, it introduces new packaging because ______.
A. it is good for the environment
B. it helps keep the food fresh
C. it makes the product easier to carry
D. the previous pack is not up to standard
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】[解析] Procter& Gamible:new packaging
[定位处] 第十六段和第十七段首句
[解析] 第十六段提到,宝洁也正在推广它的“未来友好型”产品,据该公司称,与标准包装相比,新包装少用15%的能耗、水和包装材料。由新包装少用15%的能耗、水和包装材料可知,保洁公司推出新包装是因为它更环保,第十七段首句Paula Rosenblum对新包装的评价中提到的They are more environmentally friendly也印证了这一点,故答案为[A]。[B]和[C]是卡夫公司正推广的“保鲜包装”的特点,故排除。
[设题分析] 非限制性定语从句处设题。本题用because将which引导的非限制性定语从句与前半句之间的因果关系显性化,解题关键是根据新包装与标准包装之间的对比进行推断。
单选题 Some marketers completely change both the shape and size of the product in order to ______.
A. cater to consumers' changing tastes
B. promote the product in a new way
C. make it more difficult for the shoppers to compare prices
D. ensure people get goods for the cheapest possible prices
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】[解析] marketers; change both the shape and size
[定位处] 第十八段首句
[解析] 题干中的Some marketers completely...product与该句提到的marketers design a new shape and size altogether对应,[C]make it more difficult for shoppers to compare prices正是对营销商这样做的目的complicating any effort to comparison shop的同义转述,故答案为[C]。 complicate意为“使……变得复杂”。
[设题分析] 目的处设题。本题用in order to将文中现在分词短语作目的状语更加明确化,解题关键是进行同义转述。