问题 单项选择题

已设定在建工程抵押权项目的商品房的预售,应要注意的事项不包括()。

A、要理清法律关系,预售部分要先解除抵押关系,后签订预售合同

B、要深度介入预售过程,包括具体到每一宗合同的签订,定期盘点库存商品房、在网上查询验证销售进度等,防止开发企业隐瞒真相、贱价抛售。

C、加强对其关联企业联保,防止逃废债务

D、应该尽可能地成为唯一的资金监管银行,对售房款进行封闭管理

答案

参考答案:C

单项选择题

表1国有及国有控股企业在工业主要经济指标中的比重
(单位:个、亿元、万人、%)
国有及国有控股企业 占规模以上工业企业比重
2005 2006 2007 2008 2005 2006 2007 2008
企业单位数 27477 24961 20680 21313 10.11 8.27 6.14 5.00
工业总产值
(当年价格)
83749.92 98910.45 119685.65 143786.66 33.28 31.24 29.54 28.34
资产总计 117629.61 135153.35 158187.87 188811.37 48.05 46.41 44.81 43.78
利润总额 6519.75 8485.46 10795.19 9063.59 44.04 43.51 39.75 29.66
税金总额 5387.37 6428.40 7785.54 8504.09 48.50 46.26 43.68 38.10
从业人数 1874.85 1804.00 1742.99 27.19 24.52 22.13 20.30
表2非国有企业在工业主要经济指标中的比重
(单位:个、亿元、万人、%)
非国有企业 占规模以上工业企业比重
2005 2006 2007 2008 2005 2006 2007 2008
企业单位数 244358 277000 316088 404800 89.89 91.73 93.86 95.00
工业总产值
(当年价格)
167869.58 217678.51 285491.49 363498.23 66.72 68.76 70.46 71.66
资产总计 127154.64 156061.16 1 94849.50 242494.18 51.95 53.59 55.19 56.22
利润总额 8282.79 11018.98 1 6360.00 21498.78 55.96 56.49 60.25 70.34
税金总额 5719.98 7467.93 10039.93 13816.18 51.50 53.74 56.32 61.090
从业人数 5021.11 5554.43 6132.21 7043.53 72.81 75.48 77.87 79.70

下列说法正确的是:

A.2005~2008年我国非国有工业企业利润总额呈上升趋势.而从业人员数呈下降趋势
B.2008年非国有企业占工业企业资产总额的比重比国有及国有控股企业的高1344个百分点
C.2005~2008年国有及国有控股企业工业利润总额呈逐年上升趋势
D.非国有企业在我国工业产业发展中起支柱作用

阅读理解

You are careful with your money: you collect all kinds of coupons; look for group-buy deals if you eat out; you don't buy clothes unless in a sale. Does all this make you a wise consumer?

Let's do the math first: you walk into a coffee shop and see two deals for a cup of coffee. The first deal offers 33 percent extra coffee. The second takes 33 percent off the  regular price. What's the better deal? Well, they are about the same, you'd think. And you'd be wrong. The deals appear to be equal, but in fact, they are different. Here's the math: Let's say the standard coffee is 10 yuan and let's divide the amount of coffee into three portions(部分). That makes about 3.3 yuan per portion, The first deal gets you 4 portions for 10 yuan (2.5 yuan per portion) and the second gets you 3 portions of coffee for 6.6 yuan (2.2 yuan per portion) and is therefore a better deal.

In a new study published by the Journal of Marketing, participants were asked the same question, and most of them chose the first deal, the Atlantic website reported. Why? Because getting something extra for free feels better than getting the same for less. The applications of this view into consumer psychology(心理) are huge. Instead of offering direct discounts, shops offer larger sizes or free samples.

According to the study, the reason why these marketing tricks work is that consumers don't really know how much anything should cost, so we rely on parts of our brains that  aren't strictly quantitative.

There are some traps we should be aware of when shopping. First of all, we are heavily influenced by the first number. Suppose you are shopping in Hong Kong. You walk into Hermes, and you see a 100,000 yuan bag. "That's crazy." You shake your head and leave. The next shop is Gucci, a handbag here costs 25,000 yuan. The price is still high, but compared to the 100,000 yuan price tag you just committed to your memory, this is a steal. Stores often use the price difference to set consumers' expectation.

Another trap we often fall to Is that we are not really sure what things are worth. And so we use clues(暗示) to tell us what we ought to pay for them. US economist Dan Ariely has done an experiment to prove this. According to the Atlantic, Ariely pretended he was giving a lecture on poetry. He told one group of students that the tickets cost money and another group that they would be paid to attend. Then he informed both groups that thelecture was free. The first group was anxious to attend, believing they were getting something of value for free. The second group mostly declined, believing they were being forced to volunteer for the same event without reward.

What's a lecture on poetry by an economist worth? The students had no idea. That's  the point. Do we really know what a shirt is worth ? What about a cup of coffee? What's the worth of a life insurance.policy? Who knows? Most of us don't. As a result, our shopping  brain uses only what is knowable:  visual(祝觉的) clues, invited emotions, comparisons, and  a sense of bargain. We are not stupid. We are just easily influenced.

小题1:The first paragraph of the passage is intended to      

A.ask a question

B.introduce a topic

C.give some examples

D.describe a phenomenon小题2:The writer takes the math for example in Paragraph 2 to show      .          _.

A.consumers usually fall into marketing traps

B.consumers' expectation is difficult to predict

C.consumers' purchasing power is always changing

D.consumers rely on their own judgment when shopping小题3:What consumer psychology is mentioned in the passage?

A.The first number has little influence on which item should be bought.

B.Consumers never use visual clues to decide how much should be paid.

C.Getting something extra for free is better than getting the same for less.

D.Consumers never rely on parts of the brains that aren't strictly quantitative.小题4:According to the passage, shops use the following tricks to make more profits EXCEPT         .  

A.showing price differences

B.offering larger sizes

C.providing free samples

D.giving direct discounts小题5:What can we know from US economist Dan Ariely's experiment?

A.Ariely's free lecture enjoyed popularity among students.

B.The students actually didn't know what the lecture was worth.

C.The second group was willing to be volunteers without reward.

D.The first group was eager to find out the value of Ariely's lecture.