问题 单项选择题

下列关于工程承包的选项中,属于非法分包的是()。

A.分包专业工程的承包人,将其中的劳务作业任务分包给了有相应资质的劳务分包公司 

B.总承包人将劳务作业任务分包给了以自然人为包工头的农民工建筑队 

C.总承包人将设备安装任务分包给了有相应资质的设备制造厂商 

D.总成败人将合同额200万元的模板工程施工作业任务分包给了有相应资质但注册资金仅为50万元的劳务分包公司

答案

参考答案:B

单项选择题
单项选择题

In 1998 consumers could purchase virtually anything over the Internet. Books, compact discs, and even stocks were available from World Wide Web Sites that seemed to spring up almost daily. A few years earlier, some people had predicted that consumers accustomed to shopping in stores would be reluctant to buy things that they could not see or touch in person. For a growing number of time-starved consumers, however, shopping from their home computer was proving to be a convenient alternative to driving to the store.

A research estimated that in 1998 US consumers would purchase $ 7.3 billion of goods over the Internet, double the 1997 total. Finding a bargain was getting easier, owing to the rise of online auctions and Web sites that did comparison shopping on the Internet for the best deal.

For all the consumer interest, retailing in cyberspace was still a largely unprofitable business, however. Internet pioneer Amazon. com, which began selling books in 1995 and later branched into recorded music and videos, posted revenue of $153.7 million in the third quarter, up from $37.9 minion in the same period of 1997. Overall, however, the company’s loss widened to $45.2 million from $9.6 million, and analysts did not expect the company to turn a profit until 2001. Despite the great loss, Amazon. com had a stock market value of many billions, reflecting investors’ optimism about the future of the industry.

Internet retailing appealed to investors because it provided an efficient means for reaching millions of consumers without having the cost of operating conventional stores with their armies of salespeople. Selling online carried its own risks, however. With so many companies competing for consumers’ attention, price competition was intense and profit margins thin or nonexistent. One video retailer sold the hit movie Titanic for $9.99, undercutting the $19.99 suggested retail price and losing about $6 on each copy sold. With Internet retailing still in its initial stage; companies seemed willing to absorb such losses in an attempt to establish a dominant market position.

Which of the following is true, according to the writer()

A. Consumers are reluctant to buy things on the Internet

B. Consumers are too busy to buy things on the Internet

C. More and more consumers prefer Internet shopping

D. Internet retailing is a profitable business