问答题
Questions 7~10
U.S. consumer
prices climbed faster than expected in May, further fanning investor fears over
inflation. Stock markets around the world have cracked sharply lower the past
few weeks, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average losing all the ground it had
gained so far this year. Japan's stock market is down 11% on the year; gold has
had its biggest slide in a decade and a half; and many emerging markets are
wobbling. After Wednesday's Consumer Price Index report from the Labor
Department, which showed a 0.4 percent increase in prices for May (core
inflation, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.3 percent), the stock market
made a comeback. But with future interest rate hikes now starting to be priced
into the market, investor fears that central bankers around the world will go
overboard and continue to drive rates higher is set to further spook markets.
This is no trading correction that investors have to absorb. The real risk of a
jarring bear market has emerged.
But while the trauma that
inflation created for investors in the 1970s is still close to the surface, the
sudden frenzy is misplaced. Powerful forces in the world economy continue to
keep prices largely in check.
Over the past decade, inflation
has been a minor threat compared with brutal deflationary shocks. They started
with the collapse of the Mexican peso in the mid-1990s. In 1997, much of eastern
Asia's flourishing economy was leveled. Next were Russia, Turkey and Argentina;
Brazil teetered on the brink. By early 2001, Silicon Valley, the pride of the U.
S. economy, was crashing, while entire sectors of the so-called New Economy
disintegrated.
The tech wreck may be over, but it has left a
legacy of low prices. Tech companies had to dump on the market everything from
fiberoptic networks to computer chips, as desperate investors struggled to raise
cash. That slashed telecommunication costs at the very moment that emerging
markets were producing a skilled and hungry generation of information workers.
Result? The offshore outsourcing revolution and downward pressure on
global production costs that keeps inflation under control. Equally
powerful are the ultra-low-cost emerging-market manufacturing bases, led by
China. With more than 1 billion people set to enter the urban labor markets of
China, India, Brazil and Indonesia in the next 20 years, all those pressures on
prices will only intensify.
More immediate forces are
also at work to keep prices from surging. Despite some wishful thinking, growth
in Europe is slowing, not accelerating. A large part of U. S. growth has been
driven by booming real estate prices. But in the past two years, the Fed has
increased rates 16 times, so real estate-driven consumption is yesterday's news.
Tomorrow's story will be the sharp fall in U. S. growth as consumers face
higher mortgage costs. That dynamic could become particularly nasty, given
the record level of U. S. household debt, government deficit and unequaled
current-account shortfall.
Investors are often caught
fiat-footed when markets slide. In 2001~2002, deflation was the fear of the day,
but few investors at the time saw the opportunity in commodities, which were
going for a fraction of today's prices. Today investors are obsessed with
inflation, while government and top-tier corporate bonds are shunned.
That should be telling us something. What is it? In the past few years,
the central banks of Japan, the U.S. and Europe have cut interest rates so
aggressively that the real cost of borrowing fell to, effectively,
below zero. That spurred extraordinary amounts of debt financing by
governments and corporations. But now, as the global credit cycle tightens, some
of the marginal investments will quickly become unsustainable. If central
bankers keep raising interest rates, deeper cracks would open in the world
economy.
What is really troubling markets is not inflation. It
is the fear that central banks may have tightened too much, and will tighten
further. If that happens, the recent market shock would be merely the precursor
to a still more dramatic quake.
【正确答案】
【答案解析】Over the past weeks, stock markets around the world are a little bit depressed. Dow Jones Industrial Average has lost all the gains it earned so far. Japan's stock market is down 11% on the year. The price of gold has dropped in the largest scale in 15 years. Many emerging markets are not stable.
【正确答案】
【答案解析】In early 2001, Silicon Valley, the U. S. center of high technology, suffered a great depression. Now the depression is over, but its fallouts continue to drive prices down. Tech companies have to dump on the markets high-tech equipments at very low prices, as investors want to get cash.
【正确答案】
【答案解析】In the past, a large part of U. S. growth has been driven by booming real estate prices. But in the past two years, interest rates have been raised 16 times. Since customers now face higher mortgage costs, the U.S. economic growth is expected to fall sharply.
【正确答案】
【答案解析】U.S. consumer prices climbed faster than expected in May, but powerful forces in the world economy can keep inflation largely in check. The prices of high tech equipment will continue to fall, because tech companies are dumping products on the market, and outsourcing revolution exerts downward pressure on global production costs.