单选题
Germany has gold reserves of just under 3, 400 tons, the second-largest reserves in the world after the United States. Much of that is in the safekeeping of central banks outside Germany, especially in the U. S. One would think that with such a valuable stash, worth around 133 billion($170 billion), the German government would want to keep a close eye on its whereabouts. But now a bizarre dispute has broken out between different German institutions over how closely the reserves should be checked. Germany"s federal audit office, the Bundesrechnungshof, which monitors the government"s financial management, is unhappy with how the central bank, the Bundesbank, keeps tabs on its gold. According to media reports, the auditors are dissatisfied with the fact that gold reserves in Frankfurt are more closely monitored than those held abroad. In Germany, spot checks are carried out to make sure that the gold bars are in the right place. But for the German gold that is stored on the Bundesbank"s behalf by the U. S. Federal Reserve in New York, the Bank of England in London and the Banque de France in Paris, the German central bank relies on the assurances of its foreign counterparts, that the gold is where it should be. The three foreign central banks give the Bundesbank annual statements confirming the size of the reserves, but the Germans do not usually carry out physical inspections of the bars. According to German media reports, the Bundesrechnungshof has now recommended in its confidential annual audit of the Bundesbank for 2011 that Germany"s central bank check its foreign gold reserves with yearly spot checks. The Bundesbank has rejected the demand, arguing that central banks do not usually check each others" reserves, and there are no doubts about the integrity and the reputation of these foreign depositories. Germany moved some of its gold reserves abroad during the Cold War to protect them from a possible Soviet attack. Some of the gold was moved back to Frankfurt after the collapse of communism. But the Bundesbank argues that it still makes sense to store some gold in major financial centers so that it can be sold quickly if necessary. Although the Bundesbank does not provide exact details about the distribution, it has revealed that the largest share of Germany"s gold is held in New York, followed by Frankfurt, London and Paris. In times of uncertainty about the future of Europe"s common currency, gold is a hot topic, and some Germans take a dim view of the fact that much of the country"s gold—which theoretically belongs to the people—is held abroad. Some members of parliament have even expressed doubts as to whether the foreign gold reserves really exist. Philipp Missfelder, a member of the conservative Christian Democratic Union(CDU), wanted to see the gold for himself and traveled to New York in person to inspect the holdings, according to the newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau. Peter Gauweiler, a Bundestag member with the Christian Social Union(CSU), is also skeptical about the foreign gold reserves. In recent years he has attempted to gain more information about Germany"s gold through parliamentary questions. Last year, he had an economics professor prepare an expert report on the subject, which concluded that the Bundesbank was not fulfilling its inventory regulations by failing to physically inspect the gold. Gauweiler doubts that the Bundesbank would have immediate access to all its gold if necessary, suggesting that part of the gold may have even been lent out—a claim that the Bundesbank rejects. Some Germans even want to bring the gold reserves back to Germany. An initiative called " Gold Action" is campaigning under the slogan: "Repatriate Our Gold!" Its petition has been signed by prominent industrialist Hans-Olaf Henkel and Frank Schaffler, a parliamentarian with the business-friendly Free Democrats. The initiative alleges that there is an "acute" danger that the German gold could be expropriated as a result of the financial and debt crisis. They argue that the German government could soon be forced to sell gold to cover the costs of the crisis. But the Bundesbank wants to leave the gold where it is. Observers point out that apart from the high cost of transporting the gold back to Frankfurt, the symbolic effect of Germany repatriating its gold reserves might unsettle the nervous financial markets, who could see it as a sign of an impending collapse of the euro.
单选题
The German Bundesbank makes sure of its gold reserves stored in the U.S. by______.
单选题
The Bundestag member Gauweiler suggests that______.
【正确答案】
C
【答案解析】解析:根据题干关键词“Gauweiler”可将本题定位至第七段。该段主要描述了高威勒(Gauweiler)本人对德国国外黄金储备的疑虑。在该段末句高威勒指出,他对德国央行是否能在必要时直接使用这些黄金表示怀疑,并暗示有些黄金可能已经被外借它用,C项符合文意,为本题答案。本文第六段第二句提到,有些议员怀疑这些黄金储备是否真正存在,但这并不是高威勒本人的观点,排除A项;第八段中作者提到有些德国人想把国外的黄金储备移回德国,因为他们害怕这些黄金会在金融危机和债务危机时被没收,政府将不得不卖掉黄金来解决危机,这是活动发起人而不是高威勒持有的观点,排除B项;第七段第三句提到,高威勒给出的专家报道中指出,德国央行没有履行存活规章,因为他们没有对国外储备的黄金进行抽查,可见他认为实地检查黄金储备(physically inspect the gold)是央行按章履行的,并没有说召回黄金(repatriate the gold)是央行的存活规章,排除D项。
单选题
What will be the biggest impact of transporting the gold back to Germany?
【正确答案】
D
【答案解析】解析:本题为细节考查题。文章倒数第一段提到德国央行坚持将黄金储备于国外,因为有观察者指出,黄金储备的召回除了消耗高额的运输成本外,还将会造成金融市场的动荡(unsettle the nervousfinancial markets),因为它象征着欧元即将崩溃,可见运回黄金的最大影响是给金融市场造成恐慌(panic),D符合文意,为本题答案。