问题 问答题 论述题

比较战后布雷顿森林体系与战前国际金汇兑本位制的异同。(7分)

答案

参考答案:

战后布雷顿森林体系与战前金汇兑本位的区别:

(1)国际准备金中是黄金与美元并重,而不只是黄金(1分)

(2)战前处于统治地位的储备货币,除英镑外,还有美元和法郎,而战后美元是唯一的主要储备货币(1分)

(3)战前英、美、法三国都允许居民兑换黄金,战后美国只同意外国政府向美国兑换(1分)

(4)战前没有一个国际机构维持着国际货币秩序,战后有国际货币基金组织作为国际货币体系正常运转的中心(0.5分)

战后布雷顿森林体系与战前金汇兑本位制的相似之处。

(1)战后会员国的货币平价与战前金平价相似(1分)

(2)战后会员国货币汇率的变动不超过平价上下1%的范围与战前黄金输送点相似(1分)

(3)战后会员国的国际储备除黄金外还有美元与英镑等可兑换货币,与战前国际储备相似(0.5分)

(4)战后对经常项目在原则上不实施外汇管制,与战前的自由贸易和自由兑换类似(1分)

单项选择题

The questions in this group are based on the content of a passage. After reading the passage, choose the best answer to each question. Answer all questions following the passage on the basis of what is stated or implied in the passage.

Although hard statistics are difficult to come by, there is substantial anecdotal evidence that use of performance-enhancing drugs, or doping, is rampant in professional sports. Of perhaps greater significance to society are the estimated 1.5 million amateur athletes who use steroids, either to improve their appearance or to emulate the performance of their favorite professional athletes. This chemical epidemic is a pernicious threat to both the nation’s health and our collective sense of "fair play."

Nonprescription anabolic steroids have been illegal in the United States since 1991, and most professional sports leagues have banned them since the 1980s. These bans are partly a matter of fairness--a talented athlete trained to the peak of her ability simply cannot compete with an equivalent athlete using steroids--but also based on issues of health. Anabolic androgenic steroids ("anabolic" means that they build tissues; "androgenic" means that they increase masculine traits) have been linked to liver damage, kidney tumors, high blood pressure, balding, and acne. They function by increasing the body’s level of testosterone, the primary male sex hormone. In men, this dramatic increase in testosterone can lead to the shrinking of testicles, infertility, and the development of breasts; in women, it can lead to the growth of facial hair and permanent damage to the reproductive system. Steroids have also been linked to a range of psychological problems, including depression and psychotic rage.

The punishments for getting caught using steroids are severe, and the serious health consequences are well documented. Despite this, millions of professional and amateur athletes continue to use performance-enhancing drugs. Why is this

One clear pattern is that many athletes will do whatever it takes to get an edge on the competition. Since the 1950s, Olympic athletes have played a cat-and-mouse game with Olympic Committee officials to get away with doping, because the drugs really do work. Athletes who dope are simply per and faster than their competitors who play fair. Professional athletes in football and baseball have found that steroids and human growth hormone can give them the edge to score that extra touch-down or home run, and in the modern sports market, those results can translate into millions of dollars in salary. For the millions of less talented athletes in gyms and playing fields across the country, drugs seem like the only way to approach the abilities of their heroes in professional sports.

The other clear pattern, unfortunately, is that it has been all too easy for abusers to get away with it. Steroid abuse is often regarded as a "victimless crime." One of the favored ways to trick the testers is to use "designer" steroids. There are thousands of permutations of testosterone, such as THG, that can be produced in a lab. Chemists have discovered that they can create new drugs that produce androgenic effects but do not set off the standard doping tests. Other methods have been to use the steroids but stop a few weeks before testing, to use other chemicals to mask the traces of steroids, or to switch in a "clean" sample of urine at the testing site. Other athletes use steroid precursors, such as androstene-dione, that have androgenic effects similar to those of steroids but are not illegal because they are not technically steroids. The sad fact is that unless the government and professional sports organizations are willing to get tough on the steroid problem, the use of performance-enhancing dugs in sports is not going to end.

The author’s attitude toward the problem of steroid abuse is best described as which of the following ?()

A. Cautious but optimistic

B. Judgmental but supportive

C. Ambivalent but resigned

D. Curious but subjective

E. Concerned but pessimistic

单项选择题