Passage4
Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.
But I can't save any money. It's an excuse I hear a lot from which I detect a note of defiance. In the past few years, it has become increasingly frequent, as more and more Americans make less than we spend, eating up the savings in our homes. The national savings rate is declining. And the situation seems to be getting worse.
We certainly know that saving money is good for us. Yet saving for tomorrow is sill a largely ignored and unappreciated skill. The question that naturally follows is: Why? Why don't Americans make saving a priority?
To start with, saving today is much harder. The typical household income has held largely steady for a good half decade, while prices have continued to rise. If
you're having to spend a disproportionate amount of income on food and gas, it's hard to save. Besides, credit became too accessible. For years it was simply too easy to get your hands on money to spend. While banks at one time would not let you spend more than 36 percent of your total income on debt, they stretched that
number to 55 percent during the housing boom. Why save when you could get that big flat-screen TV today and pay for it with mortgage debt that was both cheap and deductible? Last but not least, saving is, was, and always will be no fun. Think about it this way: Choosing to save almost always means opting for delayed gratification instead of immediate gratification. The pleasure of getting something good today is much greater than that in the future even if the reward in the
future is bigger.
Recently, neuroeconomists, a relatively new breed of experts in economics and neuroscience, have started using MRIs (核磁共振成像) to view the brain as it is making money choices. When something we want to buy comes into view, they see the pleasure center firing up. Similarly, getting a few dollars today is more trilling than getting a slightly larger profit tomorrow. And if you have to wait a few months for that gain, it will have to be much bigger in order to arouse the same interest in your brain. Things way off in the future like retirement don't
jostle the pleasure center much at all.
In the author"s eyes, Americans say they can't save any money because they______
(65)
(67)
(66)
And what a noble medium the English language is.[ (63)It is not possible to write a page without experiencing positivist pleasure at the richness and variety the flexibility and the profoundness of our mother-tongue.(64)It an English writer cannot say what he has to say in English and in simple English, depend upon it, it is probably not worth saying. ]What a pity it is that English is not more generally studied. I am not going to attack classical education. (65)No one who has the slightest pretension to literary tastes can be insensible to the attraction of Greece and Rome.[(66)But I confess our present educational system excites in my mind grave misgivings.]I cannot believe that a system is good, or even reasonable, which thrusts upon reluctant and uncomprehending multitudes of treasures which can only be appreciated by the privileged and gifted few. [(67)To the vast majority of boys who attend our public schools a classical education is from beginning to end one long useless, meaningless rigmaroles, ]If I am told that classics are the best preparation for the study of English. I reply that by far the greater number of students finish their education while this preparatory stage is sill incomplete and without deriving any of the benefits which are promised as its result.
(From The Joys of Writing)
(63)
(64)
What do neuroeconomists intend to find. when they use MRIs to view the brain as it is making money choices?
Why don't Americans want to save money?
(60)
(59)
(58)
2005年初级经济师考试《旅游经济专
初级旅游经济师试题及答案一
初级旅游经济师试题及答案二
2005年初级经济师考试《邮电经济专
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初级经济师试题及答案2(邮电经济)
初级经济师试题及答案2(保险经济)
初级经济师试题及答案3(保险经济)
2014年经济师初级考试真题《建筑经