考研英语真题报刊阅读100篇.doc
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1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流考研英语真题报刊阅读100篇.精品文档.Online booksellers face highercosts for shipping abroadTHE Postal Service is taking the “ship” out of shipping, and thousands of small online booksellers are bracing for trouble. The post office said last month that as of mid-May, it would no longer tran
2、sport goods internationally via cargo ships for individual customers. These so-called surface deliveries have been the crucial method by which booksellers have sold books to foreign markets because the cost is about one-third that of air mail. Analysts said A would not be affected by the change; int
3、ernational book shipments represent a small fraction of its business, and because, like other high-volume businesses, it can qualify for discounts on foreign shipments. But many thousands of smaller used-and rare-book merchants say they will suffer, since they rely on foreign demand.“If postage cost
4、s as much, if not more, than the book, itll be hard to sell books,” said Rob Stuart, owner of FrenchboroB, a seller of rare and antique books in Frenchboro, Maine.“And maybe 25 percent or more of my books sell internationally.”In announcing the changes last month, the post office said demand for int
5、ernational air-mail delivery was increasing at the expense of sea-borne services, which account for just 2.7 percent of foreign deliveries.“As a result, efficient international surface delivery networks have diminished and costs have dramatically increased,” the Postal Service said.Mr. Stuart called
6、 the changes “a brutal reality” that put him in a difficult position, since his entire town may feel the effects. His company has shipped enough rare and antique books to sustain mail deliveries for the 75 residents of Frenchboro, an island about eight miles off Maines northeast coast. Now Mr. Stuar
7、t, who is also a town selectman, said the islands mail deliveries could be threatened, and he may also be forced to lay off a part-time worker. Yvonne Yoerger, a spokeswoman for the Postal Service, said customers arent yet aware of other options. She said “customized agreements” for surface mail are
8、 being developed for higher-volume shippers that will be enhanced over the next several months to address the needs of small businesses. “The Postal Service has a longstanding commitment to small businesses and is working to accommodate customers needs as the international mail changes take effect,”
9、 Ms. Yoerger said. Philip Bevis, chief executive of Arundel Books, which sells online and in its Seattle store, said he did not believe such customized agreements would extend to small booksellers like him. “I think the Postal Service dangled that to defuse any pushback,” Mr. Bevis said. “If they we
10、re really serious about this, they wouldve pushed back the cancellation of surface mail until they could incorporate these other standards.” Because small booksellers typically list their inventories with multiple Web sites, like Amazon, AbeB and A, the new shipping costs will be felt, to varying de
11、grees, up the industrys food chain until those customized agreements are final. The falling dollarTHE dollars tumble this week was attended by predictable shrieks from the markets; but as it fell to a 20-month low of $1.32 against the euro, the only real surprise was that it had not slipped sooner.
12、Indeed, there are good reasons to expect its slide to continue, dragging it below the record low of $1.36 against the euro that it hit in December 2004.The recent decline was triggered by nasty news about the American economy. New figures this week suggested that the housing markets troubles are hav
13、ing a wider impact on the economy. Consumer confidence and durable-goods orders both fell more sharply than expected. In contrast, German business confidence has risen to a 15-year high. There are also mounting concerns that central banks in China and elsewhere, which have been piling up dollars ass
14、iduously for years, may start selling.Yet cyclical factors only partly explain why the dollar has been strong. At bottom, its attractiveness is based more on structural factorsor, more accurately, on an illusion about structural differences between the American and European economies.The main reason
15、 for the dollars strength has been the widespread belief that the American economy vastly outperformed the worlds other richcountry economies in recent years. But the figures do not support the hype. Sure, Americas GDP growth has been faster than Europes, but that is mostly because its population ha
16、s grown more quickly too. Dig deeper and the difference shrinks. Official figures of productivity growth, which should in theory be an important factor driving currency movements, exaggerate Americas lead. If the two are measured on a comparable basis, productivity growth over the past decade has be
17、en almost the same in the euro area as it has in America. Even more important, the latest figures suggest that, whereas productivity growth is now slowing in America, it is accelerating in the euro zone.So, contrary to popular perceptions, Americas economy has not significantly outperformed Europes
18、in recent years. And to achieve this not-much-better-than parity, America has had to pump itself full of steroids. Since 2000 its structural budget deficit (after adjusting for the impact of the economic cycle) has widened sharply, while American households saving rate has plunged, causing the curre
19、nt-account deficit to swell. Over the same period, the euro-area economies saw no fiscal stimulus and household saving barely budged.Americas growth, thus, has been driven by consumer spending. That spending, supported by dwindling saving and increased borrowing, is clearly unsustainable; and the co
20、nsequent economic and financial imbalances must inevitably unwind. As that happens, the country could face a prolonged period of slower growth.As for Europe, the old continent is hobbled by inflexible product and labour markets. But that, paradoxically, is an advantage: it means the place has a lot
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