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科目:初等/五等/佐級◆英文
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1(C).

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【題組】42 When is one likely to pay for higher prices?
(A)on Monday
(B)on Thursday
(C)on Saturday
(D)on Tuesday


2(B).

  The 30-Hour Famine is a program of World Vision, an international Christian relief and development organization established in the 1950s and dedicated to helping children in the world, because “when children have food, shelter and schooling and are protected, valued and loved, a community thrives.” 
  Each year, World Vision decides which countries will receive funding from the 30-Hour Famine. In 2001, for example, the money went to Rwanda, India, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, Guatemala, Mali, Tanzania and the fund raising countries. In India, the money is being used to rescue children from sweatshops. In Ethiopia, where a drought has swept the land and robbed it of its vegetation, the money is being used for reforestation and soil management programs. Eighty per cent of all money raised goes to help children, with the other 20 per cent spent on staff salaries and marketing to increase awareness of world hunger.
  Now that you know about the 30-Hour Famine and the difference it can make for children around the world, what are you going to do? You can visit , learn about the campaigns in your country, register to participate in a 30-Hour Famine and plunge whole-heartedly into your hunger!

【題組】43 What does the second paragraph center on?
(A)How the 30-Hour Famine works.
(B)How the money raised by the Famine is used.
(C)How the writer learned about the 30-Hour Famine.
(D)How many children die from diseases related to famine.


3(B).

22 The combined population of the cities of Hualien, Chiayi, and Pintung is far less than _____.
(A)the city of Tainan
(B)that of the city of Tainan
(C)people in the city of Tainan
(D)those of the city of Tainan


4(B).
X


請依下文回答第 46 題至第 50 題

        For decades inflation was the bogeyman in rich countries. But now some economists reckon that deflation, or falling prices, may be a more serious threat—in America and Europe as well as Japan. That would be decidedly awkward, given the surge in borrowing by firms and households in recent years. Particularly worrying is the rise in borrowing by American households to finance purchases of houses, cars or luxury goods. Deflation would swell the real burden of these debts, forcing consumers to cut their spending.

        Deflation is not necessarily bad. If falling prices are caused by faster productivity growth, as happened in the late 19th century, then it can go hand in hand with robust growth. On the other hand, if deflation reflects a slump in demand and excess capacity, it can be dangerous, as it was in the 1930s, triggering a downward spiral of demand and prices.

        Today, both the good and bad sorts of deflation are at work. Some prices are falling because of productivity gains, thanks to information technology. But the weakness of profits suggests that most deflation is now bad, not good. Deflation is particularly harmful when an economy is awash with debt. Total private-sector debt is now much higher than when deflation was last experienced in the 1930s. Falling prices not only increase the real burden of debt, they also make it impossible for a central bank to deliver negative real interest rates, because nominal rates cannot go below zero.

        If deflation causes real debts to swell, debtors may have to cut spending and sell assets to meet their payments. This can unleash a vicious spiral of falling incomes, asset prices and rising real debt. Irving Fisher, an American economist, described this process in a famous article in 1993 entitled “The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions”. He described how attempts by individuals to reduce their debt burden by cutting costs could paradoxically cause their debt burden to swell. Unable to increase prices to boost profits, firms have to cut costs, either by reducing labour costs and hence household income or by buying less from other firms. This is sensible for an individual firm, but it reduces demand in the economy, thwarting the desired improvement in profit, leading to another round of cuts and putting further downward pressure on prices.


【題組】48 Under what situation would deflation not be a threat to the society?
(A)When product availability exceeds people’s demands
(B)When firms are borrowing money from the banks for business
(C)When people are borrowing to purchase houses
(D)When it is caused by faster productivity growth


5(A).

24 When I was a child, my father _______ me a story at night before bedtime.
(A) used to read
(B) was used to have read
(C) used to have read
(D) was used to read


6(D).

16 The writer’s horror story _____ to all of us.
(A) is shocked
(B) shocked
(C) shocking
(D) was a shock


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