问题 问答题

根据十七届三中全会,论述进一步强调农村改革发展的必要性。

答案

参考答案:一方面,当前,国际形势继续发生深刻变化,我国改革发展进入关键阶段。要更加自觉地把继续解放思想落实到坚持改革开放、推动科学发展、促进社会和谐上来,毫不动摇地推进农村改革发展。
另一方面,我国农村正在发生新的变革,我国农业参与国际合作和竞争正面临新的局面,特别是城乡二元结构造成的深层次矛盾突出。农业基础仍然薄弱,最需要加强;农村发展仍然滞后,最需要扶持;农民增收仍然困难,需要加快。
总之,我国总体上已进入以工促农、以城带乡的发展阶段,进入加快改造传统农业、走中国特色农业现代化道路的关键时刻,进入着力破除城乡二元结构、形成城乡经济社会发展一体化新格局的重要时期。

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"You are not here to tell me what to do. You are here to tell me why I have done what I have already decided to do," Montagu Norman, the Bank of England’s longest-serving governor (1920-1944), is reputed to have once told his economic adviser. Today, thankfully, central banks aim to be more transparent in their decision making, as well as more rational. But achieving either of these things is not always easy. With the most laudable of intentions, the Federal Reserve, America’s central bank, may be about to take a step that could backfire.

Unlike the Fed, many other central banks have long declared explicit inflation targets and then set interest rates to try to meet these. Some economists have argued that the Fed should do the same. With Alan Greenspan, the Fed’s much-respected chairman, due to retire next year—after a mere 18 years in the job—some Fed officials want to adopt a target, presumably to maintain the central bank’s credibility in the scary new post-Greenspan era. The Fed discussed such a target at its February meeting, according to minutes published this week. This sounds encouraging. However, the Fed is considering the idea just when some other central banks are beginning to question whether strict inflation targeting really works.

At present central banks focus almost exclusively on consumer-price indices. On this measure Mr. Greenspan can boast that inflation remains under control. But some central bankers now argue that the prices of assets, such as houses and shares, should also somehow be taken into account. A broad price index for America which includes house prices is currently running at 5.5%, its fastest pace since 1982. Inflation has simply taken a different form.

Should central banks also try to curb increases in such asset prices Mr. Greenspan continues to insist that monetary policy should not be used to prick asset-price bubbles. Identifying bubbles is difficult, except in retrospect, he says, and interest rates are a blunt weapon: an increase big enough to halt rising prices could trigger a recession. It is better, he says, to wait for a housing or stock market bubble to burst and then to cushion the economy by cutting interest rates—as he did in 2001-2002.

And yet the risk is not just that asset prices can go swiftly into reverse. As with traditional inflation, surging asset prices also distort price signals and so can cause a misallocation of resources—encouraging too little saving, for example, or too much investment in housing. Surging house prices may therefore argue for higher interest rates than conventional inflation would demand. In other words, strict inflation targeting—the fad of the 1990s—is too crude.

It is implied in the fourth paragraph that Mr. Greenspan is skeptical of()

A. the stipulation of anti-monopoly rules and regulations

B. the intervention by central banks in asset prices

C. the prevention of economic recession

D. the countdown by the Federal Reserve of new economic upheavals