单选题
It"s easy to condemn economics as not being a "real" science, and I try not to do things that are too easy. But in recent weeks I"ve really started to wonder. It is fascinating, and frightening, to me that smart economists can disagree about whether what the economy needs right now is more government spending or less. The debate isn"t about how much stimulus, or how much austerity, or the way such stimulus/austerity should be applied, but rather about which one is called for in the first place. How is this possible? It"s like a group of doctors not being able to agree whether a patient"s blood should be thinned or coagulated. What am I supposed to make of that?
Roger Backhouse, a historian and philosopher of economics at the U.K."s University of Birmingham, helps me out in his new book, The Puzzle of Modern Economics: Science or Ideology? I"ve been reading it over the past few weeks and at first I thought Backhouse was going to confirm my worst fear: that it is so difficult to employ scientific methods in understanding super-complex large-scale economic phenomena (like the U.S. economy) that ideology is pretty much necessary if you want to come to any useful conclusions about what"s going on or what should be done. Most scientific disciplines don"t have esteemed members regularly going after one another in the op-ed pages. Economics, in an important way, feels different.
But the more I read Backhouse"s book, the more I understood that it"s important to distinguish economics from economics as it is typically practiced. Backhouse shows how the current mathematics-heavy top-down approach to economics is not the only one. He traces the origin of the approach—which necessarily assumes that people are rational agents trying to optimize their resources to the 1930s, but points out that it took some 30 years to really catch on. Before that, the field was rooted in empirical work. Theories tended to be tentative and not all-encompassing. Economists would gather data, and insight from other fields about how people behave (like psychology), in an attempt to come up with explanations about how the world works.
The current fashion, of course, is to come up with theories about how the world is supposed to work. The obvious problem: people aren"t always rational. They are, in fact, influenced by things like advertising and a sense of fairness. As a result, math-heavy top- down models can prove disastrously wrong. After all, the economy is as much a product of sociology and policy as it is pure-form economics. Yet we"d not expect a sociologist or a political scientist to be able to write a computer model to accurately capture system-wide decision-making. The conclusion I"ve come to: while economists may have an important perspective on whether it"s time for stimulus or austerity, maybe we should stop looking to them as if they are people who are in the ultimate position to know.
单选题
According to the author, economists disagree on ______
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】[解析] 第一段第四句提到,争论的焦点不是多大规模的刺激政策或紧缩政策,也不是刺激政策或紧缩政策的实施方式,而是首先需要哪一种政策(which one is called for in the first place)。在这个句子中,but rather意为“更确切地,而是”;which one指stimulus还是austerity;短语call for意为“需要”;in the first place意为“首先,起初”。
单选题
The author used to think that ______
【正确答案】
B
【答案解析】[解析] 第二段第二句提到,在阅读Backhouse的书之初,他以为Backhouse的书confirm my worst fear,也就是说,书中表达的基本观点跟他以前的观点是一致的——虽然他不希望自己以前的观点是正确的,即理解经济问题必须借助意识形态:经济现象不能用科学的方法得以解释,而只能从意识形态的角度进行解释。
单选题
It can be inferred from Paragraph 3 that ______
【正确答案】
A
【答案解析】[解析] 第三段提到现代经济学采用的是top-down approach to economics,从下文对20世纪30年代之前的经济学理论的对比可以看出,这种方法指从经济学理论或模型到实践的演绎方法。而20世纪30年代之前的理论则是一种empirical work,即注重数据的收集,重视经验或试验。所谓bottom-up approach指从数据、经验到形成理论的归纳方法。可见,第三段中提到的两种approach实际上是演绎方法和归纳方法上的区别。
单选题
The top-down models ______
【正确答案】
D
【答案解析】[解析] 最后一段对top-down经济理论进行了评价,认为它不能对目前的经济状况做出解释,无法帮助我们制定正确的经济决策。根据上一段,mathematics-heavy top-down approach to economics是目前盛行的理论,这种理论把人假定为是理性的,通过建构数学模型来解释经济现象。在第四段,这种经济理论被称作pure-form economics。
单选题
With regard to the present economic situation, the author advocates ______