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Raymond Arth knows he should feel better about the economy. His company hasn’t returned to its pre-recession revenues selling its wares to the makers of RVs and manufactured homes, but it is making a profit again. Like too many other small-business proprietors, Arth doesn’t fully trust this economic recovery. While he says he’s "guardedly optimistic" about it, his actions are all about the first half of that phrase,

In the Labor Department’s latest snapshot of the country’s job market, the private sector added 268,000 jobs in April, the largest gain in five years and the third consecutive month of solid job growth. Yet a more sobering account of where the economy might be headed—and arguably a more accurate barometer of the near-term future—is the monthly report published by the National Federation of Independent Business. After all, it’s small businesses, which have created two out of every three new jobs the economy has added since the early 1990s, that historically have led the country out of recessions. And it’s the owners of small businesses that the NFIB surveys each month for its Small Business Optimism Index.

On that front the news is anything but good. The index is down for the second straight month. Fewer small-business owners expect conditions to improve over the next half year a drop of 18 percentage points from January. The bulk of new hiring must be happening inside larger corporations, since their smaller counterparts on Main Street say they are generally reluctant to create new jobs. That aptly sums up the sentiments of Scott Lipps, the president of the Sleep Tite Mattress Factory. Before the downturn, Lipps says, his sales were about evenly split between his medical clients (hospitals and nursing homes) and consumers buying mattresses through a factory outlet. But sales to the general public plummeted starting in 2008.

"The families affected most by the economy have stopped buying," Lipps says. "And those who say ’We have to have a new mattress’ are downgrading to a medium-quality mattress. " Despite a 20 percent drop in sales, Lipps and his partner tried to forestall the inevitable by putting up $ 70,000 of their own money. But in 2010 they laid off three of their 18 full-time employees. "It should have happened in 2009, but we let our hearts run the company instead of our billfolds," Lipps says.

In Bartlesville, Mat Saddoris is feeling relatively more upbeat. Saddoris is the third-generation owner of United Linen, a restaurant-supply company that cut its workforce by more than 10 percent during the downturn’s darkest days. Revenues are back up to pre-2008 levels, and United Linen is back to its pre-recession staffing of 135 employees. But will he take the risk of growing the company "I talk to my customers and they’re optimistic—to a point," he says. "They’ve all come back from the pits, if you will, and things have been getting better in the past six or seven months. " But, he says, "I don’t think they’re ready to announce that things have turned around. \

From the last sentence of the first paragraph we know that Raymond Arth()

A. is fairly optimistic about the economic recovery

B. sold his products well in the first half of the year

C. never knows when his business will stop making a profit

D. is very cautious about the present economic situation

答案

参考答案:D

解析:

第一段最后一句提到,Raymond Arth说他是guardedly optimistic,并且说他的行为全部表现为这个词组的第一部分,这里所谓的the first half of the that phrase当然指guardedly,这个词的意思是“谨慎地,有保留地”。也就是说,虽然他表面上很乐观,但行动上却非常谨慎,因为他不完全相信经济已经复苏。

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