Big Mac Index Food for thought
巨无霸指数

简单了解巨无霸指数各国的汉堡包价格与美国汉堡包价格之比即为此国货币与美元的巨无霸指数例如:当前中国的汉堡包(巨无霸)的价格是¥9.50,而美国的是$2.90。
于是人民币对美元的当前巨无霸指数就是2.90÷9.50=3.28这个数值大大低于当前人民币与美元的汇率8.28,据此理论,我们就认为人民币被低估了这个指数是由《经济学人》《Economist》制定的。
主要理论依据是购买力平价理论。
关于这个指数最详细的介绍,莫过于《Economist》自己的一篇文章,现在与大家分享这篇妙文。
Food for thoughtMay 27th 2004 From The Economist print editionThe world economy looks very different once countries' output is adjusted for differences in prices 用不同的标准衡量国家产出,就会看到不同的世界经济HOW fast is the world economy growing? How important is China as an engine of growth? How much richer is the average person in America than in China? The answers to these huge questions depend crucially on how you convert the value of output in different countries into a common currency. Converting national GDPs into dollars at market exchange rates is misleading. Prices tend to be lower in poor economies, so a dollar of spending in China, say, is worth a lot more than a dollar in America. A better method is to use purchasing-power parities (PPP), which take account of price differences.世界经济增长的有多快?作为一个增长引擎,中国在世界经济中有多重要?美国人均比中国富多少?如何把不同国家的产出价值换算成相同的货币决定了这些问题的答案。
大一下英语口语对话food and drinks

FOOD AND DRINKS菡: Hey man, did you see the McDonald's commercial on TV last night, they were advertising big macs deal two for ten dollars.阳: Yeah, I saw that one, it almost made me want to go there last night.I like eating a big juicy burger.霜: What are you guys talking about? You two look so happy. Can I join you?展: Of course. Those two are blathering about the Big Mac ad they saw last night, and I would never eat that kind of food even it is for free. 菡: Why? I am a big fan of fast food either, I do eat their salads every once in a while, just to have the mandarin orange slices they put in them. 阳:those salads are the worst, I remember when they first came out, I ate lots of them for lunch, but I gained a few pounds very fast.霜:I knew about that too, of course I bothered to try the salads. I looked up the nutrition information on line, believe it or not, they actually contain more calories than a medium size meal.展:I never liked the other stuff from them, just when I thought fast food places are inventing new ways to attract more health conscious people, what they put out was more junk than their hamburgers.菡:what do you know about fast food and drinks, aside from not eating at those places, you two shouldn't bad mouth them. The drinks in there like sprite,clca –cola and so on is so cool if you can drink some of it inthe buring hot summer.阳:well,the drinks containes over 1000 calories. 1000 calories account for half of what you are supposed to eat in one day!霜:Aslo the french fries are not fried in vegetable oil, they often use shortening which is worse for your body than animal fat is. Besides ,I always feel thirsty after drinking it.展:. Besides ,I always feel thirsty after drinking it.You see , all they want is your money, they could care less about the health of its customers.So le t’s eat some healthy and tasty food.OK?菡:Well, I really think I need to eat healthier foods to make up what I lost.I can’t promise to set foot into those places again, I certainly would visit them less often..But I need some time to give up my bad habits . It’s just noon.Let me make a good first step.Any good ideas?阳:Well, I know a japanese restraunt. The sushi in there is very delicious.Most of food contains little fat.What’more ,it’s cheaper than the most restraunt.霜:Er,but I think the pasta is better,we can eat not only mushroom 、red capsicum and tomato ,but also the tasty noodles and sea food.展:Well, I like the beefsteak,and steak with some red wine will be wonderful.What do you think,the sushi,pasta or the steak?菡:I like the steak, it did’t have much fat.The most important is I do love the red wine.it tastes a little bitter but sweet.阳:Bravo,then let’s go.。
国家开放大学电大《人文英语4》形考任务(课后题)参考答案

4.Some teenagers go to art school in order to learn to paint walls.F
5.Taggers and graffiti artists are still willing to take risks.F
B. singing
3. Jim Thorpe started to play sportsB
B. when he was 16 years old
4. The word decathlon in paragraph 3 probably meansC
选择题二
Jim Thorpe was a Native American. He was born in 1888 in an Indian Territory(印第安人保护区)thatis now Oklahoma. Like most Native American children then, he liked to fish, hunt, swim, and play games outdoors. He was healthy and strong, but he had very little formaleducation.In1950,JimThorpewasnamedthegreatestAmericanfootballplayer.HewasalsoanOlympicgoldmedalwinner.ButThorpehadmanytragediesinhislife.
1.Teenagers are not afraid of being caught by security guards when they put their names on trains and buses.F
unit 1-3 原文+翻译 汇总

Unit1Wanted:Blue-Collar Workers招聘蓝领工人1To many, America’s industrial heartland is a place that has too little work to offer its residents. But things look very different to Karen Wright, the CEO of Ariel Corporation in Ohio. Wright’s biggest problem isn’t a lack of work; it’s a lack of skilled workers. “We have a very skilled workforce, but they are getting older,” says Wright. “I don’t know where we are going to find replacements.”对于很多人来说,美国的工业中心地带并不能给那里的居民提供许多就业岗位。
但是,在卡伦-赖特看来,事情并非如此。
作为俄亥俄州阿里尔公司的首席执行官,赖特面临的最大问题并不是缺乏就业岗位,而是缺乏熟练技术工人。
“我们有一支非常熟练的劳动力队伍,但他们的年纪越来越大。
”怀特说。
“我不知道我们要去哪里寻找新鲜血液来替代他们。
”2. That may sound surprising, given that the state has suffered from lack of jobs for a generation. Yet across the heartland, one can almost find the same problem: a shortage of skilled workers. That shortage is surely a problem for manufacturers like Wright.这听起来可能令人吃惊,因为这个国家整整一代人已经遭受了失业的痛苦。
人文英语1单元自测1至8答案

人文英语1形考1答案一、选择填空,从A、B、C三个选项中选出一个能填入空白处的最佳选项。
(每题10分)题目1题干– Thank you for your invitation.– ________________________选择一项:A. It doesn't matter.B. I'll appreciate it.C. It's a pleasure.反馈正确答案是:It's a pleasure.题目2题干– Hello, may I speak to John?– ________________________选择一项:A. Just a second, please.B. You are wanted on the telephone.C. Can I leave a message for him?反馈正确答案是:Just a second, please.题目3题干Our house is about a mile from the railway station and there are not many houses __________选择一项:A. far apartB. among themC. in between反馈译文:我们家离火车站大概一英里左右,而且中间房子不多正确答案是:in between题目4题干Both the kids and their parents __________English, I think. I know it from their accent.选择一项:A. isB. areC. been反馈译文:我想,这些孩子和他们的父母都是英格兰人。
从他们的口音我可以知道。
正确答案是:are题目5题干When Lily came home at 5 pm yesterday, her mother ______dinner in the kitchen.选择一项:A. was cookingB. cooksC. cooked反馈译文:莉莉昨天五点钟回家时,她妈妈正在厨房里做晚饭。
Syllabus

Updated:2/7/2011International Financial Policy 33502Winter 2011Brent NeimanSyllabusNotes:1)Items denoted with (KO) refer to readings in Krugman, Paul and MauriceObstfeld, 2009. International Economics. Addison-Wesley: New York. 8thEdition.2)Items denoted with (WEB) can be found in the "Readings from Web" section ofChalk.3)Items denoted with (LIB) can be found in the "Readings from Library" sectionof Chalk.4)Exercises and Assignments can be found in the appropriate sections of Chalk.5)*** denotes required readings. Others are optional.Each week has two lectures, part 1 and part 2. For clarity, the readings and information for each week is listed on one (or two) separate pages of this syllabus.Each week, please make sure you are using the most up-to-date version of this syllabus. Versions are dated in the upper-right corner, and the latest version will always be posted on the Chalk site.Part 1: Overview / Course Outline and Administrative Briefing***Frankel, Jeffrey, 2009. "What's In and Out in Global Money," IMF Finance andDevelopment, September. (WEB).***Taylor, Alan, 2004. "Global Finance, Past and Present," IMF Finance and Development,March.(WEB).Plot of International Short-Term Interest Rates (WEB)Plot of U.S. Dollar Against Foreign Currencies (WEB)Obstfeld, Maurice and Alan Taylor, 2002. "Globalization and Capital Markets," NBER Working Paper, March. (WEB)Prasad, Eswar, Rogoff, Kenneth, Wei, Shang-Jin, and M. Ayhan Kose, 2004. "Financial Globalization, Growth and Volatility in Developing Countries," NBER Working Paper, (WEB)December.Part 2: The Exchange Rate as an Asset Price: UIP and CIP***K&O, Chapter 13, "Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach,"(KO)p317-343.Part 1: Empirical UIP and The Portfolio Balance Model***Bansal, Ravi and Dahlquist, Magnus, 2000. "The Forward Premium Puzzle: Different Tales from Developed and Emerging Economies," Journal of International Economics. (LIB) (Note:You need only read up to section 2.3.3 in the paper.)***Frankel, Jeffrey, 2008. "Carried Away: Everything you Always Wanted to Know about the Carry Trade," Milken Institute Review, January.***Zhou, Wanfeng, 2007. "Carry Trade Unwinding Roils Currency Markets," Marketwatch, Feb (WEB)27.***Salmon, Felix, 2007. "Carry Trade Unwinding? It Looks Real this Time." , (WEB)16.AugustAnderson, Torben, Bollerslev, Tim, Diebold, Francis, and Clara Vega, 2003. "Micro Effects of Macro Announcements: Real-Time Price Discovery in Foreign Exchange," American Review. (LIB)Economic(Note: this article is very technical.)Burnside, Craig, Eichenbaum, Martin, and Sergio Rebelo, 2007. "The Returns to Currency Speculation in Emerging Markets," American Economic Review, May. (LIB)Optional Exercise 1: Compare the Argentine stock market returns and the US stock market returns to get a better sense of the concepts of risk aversion and risk premium. We will see in class the usefulness of augmenting the UIP setup with risk in explaining recent movements of the EUR/USD rate. See "Exercises" section of Chalk for details.Optional Exercise 2: A completely different way of testing your skills on expected returns and risk aversion is by playing the online version of the "Deal or No Deal Game." Follow the link in the "Exercises" section of Chalk to start. After choosing suitcases, "the bank" will calculate a certain offer for you to take or keep playing. Figure out whether the offer is larger or smaller than the expected return and whether you are risk neutral or risk averse. If you do this systematically you will understand whether it is the policy of the game to entice you to keep playing early on by giving you relatively unattractive payoffs after opening the first suitcases.Optional Daily FX Comments: See UBS FX Strategy and Research (WEB)Week 2 Continued on Next Page...Week 2 (January 12, 2010) ContinuedAssignment 1: UIP and Carry Trades in Practice. Due, submitted via Chalk, at 6pm on day of Class 3.Part 2: Real Exchange Rate Determination and Long-Run Fundamentals***K&O, Chapter 15, "Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run," p382-411. (KO) ***Chang, Gene Hsin, and Qin Shao, 2004. "How Much is the Chinese Currency Undervalued?A Quantitative Estimation," China Economic Review. (LIB)***"Food for Thought: The Big Mac Index," The Economist, May 27, 2004. (LIB)***"Grappling with the Strong Euro," The Economist, June 5, 2003. (LIB)Tille, Cedric, Stoffels, Nicolas, and Olga Gorbachev, 2001. "To What Extent Does Productivity Drive the Dollar?" Current Issues in Economics and Finance, August. (WEB)Taylor, Alan, and Mark Taylor, 2004. "The Purchasing Power Parity Debate," Journal ofPerspectives, Fall. (LIB)EconomicGoldman Sachs' real exchange rate model. (WEB)JP Morgan's real exchange rate model. (WEB)Required Head Start on Demo FX Trading Account:In groups, get started with your demo FX account that will be required as part of Assignment 3. Details can found in the "FX Trading" section of Chalk. Only one of you should set up the account since it may expire after 30 days. One of you needs to wait to set up the account until you start working on Assignment 3, so it doesn't time out before you can complete it. This will be discussed in class.Part 1: Exchange Rates and Exchange Rate Risk: The Manager's Perspective***Knetter, Michael and Pinelopi Goldberg, 1997. "Goods Prices and Exchange Rates: What Learned?"Journal of Economic Literature. (LIB)WeHave***Wachovia Foreign Exchange Hedging Product List. (WEB)***Eun, Cheol and Bruce Resnick, 2004. International Financial Management. Chapter 8.(LIB)Chan-Lau, Jorge, 2005. "Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk in Chile: Markets and Instruments,"IMF Working Papers, February. (WEB)Part 2: The Importance of Real Exchange Rates***Goldfajn, Ilan, and Rodrigo Valdes, 1999, "The Aftermath of Appreciations," The Quarterly Journal of Economics. (LIB)***Crockett, Keith and Linda Goldberg, 1998. "The Dollar and U.S. Manufacturing," Current Issues in Economics and Finance, November. (WEB)Assignment 2: Calculating the Extent of the Chinese Overvaluation. Due, submitted via Chalk, at 6pm on day of Class 4.Part 1: Intervention in Currency Markets***K&O, Chapter 17, "Fixed Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Intervention," p460-474.(KO)***"Meddling in the Currency Market," The Economist, November 18, 1999. (LIB)***"Intervention: Divine or Comic?" The Economist, September 23, 2000. (LIB)***"Rescuing the Euro," The Economist, May 11, 2000. (LIB)*** Krugman, Paul, 1997. "Currency Crises," Unpublished Web Notes. (WEB)Part 2: Speculative Attacks and Financial Contagion***K&O, Chapter 17, "Fixed Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Intervention," p474-489.(KO)Eichengreen, Barry, Rose, Andrew, and Charles Wyplosz, 1995. "Exchange Market Mayhem: The Antecedents and Aftermath of Speculative Attacks," Economic Policy, October.(LIB)Kapur, Basant, 2007. "Capital Flows and Exchange Rate Volatility: Singapore’s Experience", in S. Edwards (ed.), Capital Controls and Capital Flows in Emerging Economies: Policies, Practices, and Consequences, Chicago: University of Chicago Press for National Bureau of Economic Research, 575-603 (LIB)Pesenti, Paolo, and Cedric Tille, 2000. "The Economics of Currency Crises and Contagion: An FRBNY Economic Policy Review, September. (WEB)Introduction,"CANCELLED DUE TO CHICAGO SNOWPOCALYPSESee Lecture Notes on Chalk for Slides from Lecture "The IMF and World Bank: Then and Now." This lecture was optional and so will not be made up.Assignment 3: Taking FX positions with what we've learned so far. Requires some actions by February 10, so please read carefully. The completed assignment is due at beginning of Class 7 (the Wednesday section).Part 1: Midterm Examination. See "Announcements" on Chalk for additional details.Part 2: Exchange Rates and Macro, and Regime Choice***K&O, Chapter 12, "National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments," p288-312.(KO)***K&O, Chapter 16, "Output and the Exchange Rate in the Short Run," p420-451. (KO)***Krugman, Paul, 1998. "Japan: Still Trapped," Unpublished Web Notes. (WEB)***Bernanke, Ben, 2005a. "Monetary Policy in a World of Mobile Capital," Cato Journal, (WEB)Winter.Hoshi, Takeo, and Anil Kashyap, 2004. "Japan's Economic and Financial Crisis: An Overview,"Journal of Economic Perspectives, Winter. (LIB)"Money Still Matters: The Bank of Japan Must do More to Support Japan’s Sickly Economy,"The Economist, June 2, 2001. (LIB)Combined in Weeks 6 and 7 -- Part 3: Currency Areas and The Euro***K&O, Chapter 19, "Macroeconomic Policy and Coordination Under Floating Exchange(KO)p532-558.Rates,"***K&O, Chapter 20, "Optimum Currency Areas and the European Experience," p565-590.(KO)***Cochrane, Kashyap, Myerson, Zingales, "The Euro Area in Crisis," IGM Faculty Panel, Chicago Booth, February 22, 2010. (WEB)***Krugman, Paul, "Can Europe Be Saved?" NY Times Magazine, January 12, 2011. (WEB)"Germany's Euro Test," The Economist, June 12, 2003. (LIB)Frankel, Jeffrey and Andrew Rose, 2002. "An Estimate of the Effect of Common Currencies on Trade and Income," The Quarterly Journal of Economics. (LIB)Combined in Weeks 6 and 7 -- Part 1: Currency Areas and The Euro***K&O, Chapter 19, "Macroeconomic Policy and Coordination Under Floating Exchange(KO)p532-558.Rates,"***K&O, Cptr 20, "Optimum Currency Areas and the European Experience," p565-590. (KO)***Cochrane, Kashyap, Myerson, Zingales, "The Euro Area in Crisis," IGM Faculty Panel, Chicago Booth, February 22, 2010. (WEB)***Krugman, Paul, "Can Europe Be Saved?" NY Times Magazine, January 12, 2011. (WEB) "Germany's Euro Test," The Economist, June 12, 2003. (LIB)Frankel, Jeffrey and Andrew Rose, 2002. "An Estimate of the Effect of Common Currencies on Trade and Income," The Quarterly Journal of Economics. (LIB)Part 2: The U.S. Current Account***Obstfeld, Maurice and Kenneth Rogoff, 2005. "The Unsustainable US Current Account Revisited,"Current Account Imbalances: Sustainability and Adjustment. (WEB) Position***Cooper, Richard, 2007. "Living with Global Imbalances," Brookings Paper on EconomicActivity. (LIB)***"Figures to Fret About: The Current Account," The Economist, July 9,1998. (LIB)***"The Price of Profligacy," The Economist, September 18, 2003. (LIB)***"Stop Worrying and Love the Dollar: America's Deficit and the Dollar," The Economist, November 27, 2003. (LIB)Part 3: The View from Policymakers***Bernanke, Ben, 2005b. "The Global Saving Glut and the U.S. Current Account Deficit,"Speech, March 10, 2005. (WEB)Rajan, Raghuram, 2005. "Global Current Account Imbalances: Hard Landing or Soft Landing," Speech, March 15, 2005. (WEB)Greenspan, Alan, 2005. "Current Account," Speech, February 4, 2005. (WEB)Council of Economic Advisers, 2004. Chapter 14 of The Economic Report of the President, (WEB)February.Part 0: Room to Catch Up on Uncovered MaterialPart 1: Current Account Sustainability and Growth***K&O, Chapter 21, "The Global Capital Market" Performance and Policy Problems," p594-(KO)617.***Tille, Cedric, 2003. "The Impact of Exchange Rate Movements on U.S. Foreign Debt,"Current Issues in Economics and Finance, January. (WEB)***"A Cruel Sea of Capital," The Economist, May 1, 2003. (LIB)Council of Economic Advisers, 2004. Chapter 13 of The Economic Report of the President, (WEB)February.Part 2: Sovereign Wealth Funds***Truman, Edwin M., 2008. "A Blueprint for Sovereign Wealth Fund Best Practices," Peterson Institute Policy Brief. (WEB)***Johnson, Simon, 2007. "The Rise of Sovereign Wealth Funds," IMF Finance andDevelopment, September. (WEB)Setser, Brad and Rachel Ziemba, 2009. "GCC Sovereign Funds: Reversal of Fortune,"(WEB)WorkingPaper.Part 1: Growth Accounting and ChinaPart 2: China's Impact on World Trade and Finance*** Holtz-Eakin, Douglas, 2005. "Economic Relationships Between the United States and China," CBO Testimony, April 14. (WEB)***IMF 2004 Article IV Report for China. You only need to see Box 3 on Exchange Rate Flexibility and Capital Account Liberalization and Box 4 on Reform of the Banking (WEB)System.Frankel, Jeffrey, 2005. "On the Renminbi: The Choice Between Adjustment under a Fixed Exchange Rate and Adjustment under a Flexible Rate," NBER Working Paper, April.(WEB)Prasad, Eswar, and Raghuram Rajan, 2005. "China's Financial Sector Challenge," FinancialTimes, May 10. (LIB)Prasad, Eswar, Rumbaugh, Thomas, and Qing Wang, 2005. "Putting the Cart Before the Horse?Capital Account Liberalization and Exchange Rate Flexibility in China," IMF Policy Paper, January. (WEB)DiscussionPrasad, Eswar, Shang-Jin Wei, 2005. "The Chinese Approach to Capital Inflows: Patterns and Explanations,"NBER Working Paper, April. (WEB)PossibleMcKinnon, Ronald, 2009. "Solidifying a new G2: China and the United States should stabilize the yuan/dollar relationship," The International Economy, Winter. (WEB)"Not Quite So SAFE," The Economist, April 23, 2009. (WEB)Part 3: Guest Speaker on Iceland***Zoega, Gylfi, 2008. "Iceland Faces the Music," VoxEU column. (WEB)***Danielsson, Jon and Gylfi Zoega, 2009. "Entranced by Banking," VoxEU column. (WEB)Lewis, Michael, 2009. "Wall Street on the Tundra," Vanity Fair, April. (WEB)Part 1: The Current Global Crisis: Origins and Financial Sector Aspects***Reinhart, Carmen and Kenneth Rogoff, 2008. "The Aftermath of Financial Crises," Working (WEB)Paper.Barry, Brian, Cochrane, John, Kaplan, Steven, and Raghuram Rajan, 2009. Faculty Panel (video) on "What the Effects Will Be and What Should be Done" vis-a-vis the credit crisis.(WEB)Johnson, Simon, 2009. "The Quiet Coup," The Atlantic Online, May. (WEB)Part 2: The Current Global Crisis: Monetary and Fiscal Policy Responses***Barro, Robert, 2009. "Government Spending is No Free Lunch," Wall Street Journal,(WEB)22.JanuaryShiller, Robert, 2009. "Animal Spirits Depend on Trust," Wall Street Journal, January 27. (LIB)Huizinga, John, Lucas, Robert, and Kevin Murphy, 2009. Faculty Panel (video) on "Evaluating the Obama Stimulus Package." (WEB)Romer, Christina, and David Romer, 2007. "Macroeconomic Effects of Tax Changes: Estimates Based on a New Measure of Fiscal Shocks," Working Paper. (WEB)Ramey, Valerie, 2008. "Identifying government Spending Shocks: It's All in the Timing,"(WEB)WorkingPaper.Romer, Christina and Bernstein, Jared, 2009. "The Job Impact of the American Recovery and(WEB)ReinvestmentPlan."Swagel, Phillip, 2009. "The Financial Crisis: An Inside View," The Brookings Papers onActivity, Spring 2009 Conference Draft. (WEB)EconomicWeek 11 (Week of March 14, 2011. Date/Time TBD) Final Exam. Good Luck!。
2017学位英语考试培训模拟试题三 (附答案解析)

2017学位英语考试培训模拟试题三姓名_____ 学号_____考试时间:120分钟请将所有答案写在答题纸上!Part I Vocabulary and Structure (20 points)Directions: In this part there are 20 incomplete sentences. For each sentence there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the ONE answer that best completes the sentence. Then mark the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.1.The goods _____ when we arrived at the airport.A. were just unloadedB. were just being unloadedC. were just been unloadedD. had just unloaded2.The professor can hardly find sufficient grounds _____ his argument in favor of the new theory.A. which to base onB. on which to baseC. to base on whichD. which to be based on3.I think your words carry more weight than _____.A. anybody else'sB. that of anybody'sC. anybody elseD. else anybody's4.The second book was _____ by August 1996, but two years later, the end was still nowhere in sight.A. to completeB. completedC. to have been completedD. to have completed5.I would have gone to visit him in the hospital had it been at all possible, but I _____ fully occupied the wholeof last week.A. wereB. wasC. had beenD. have been6.No difficulty and no hardship _____ discouraged him.A. hasB. haveC. has beenD. have been7.I always keep candles in the house _____ there is a power cut.A. ifB. in caseC. on condition thatD. when8.Some modern children's fiction deals with serious problems and situation which a realism seldom _____ inearlier books.A. attemptedB. attemptingC. being attemptedD. having attempted9.Written in a hurry, _____.A. she made many mistakes in the paperB. there were a lot of mistakes in the paperC. we found plenty of errors in her paperD. the paper was full of errors10.Some students prefer a strict teacher who tells them exactly what to do. Others prefer _____ to work on theirown.A. leavingB. to leaveC. having been leftD. to be left11.Our big surprise was a general agreement that there is _____ for change.A. roomB. spaceC. lengthD. dimension12.Though the long-term _____ can't be predicted, the project has been approved by the committee.A. affectB. effectC. effortD. afford13.Not until the game had begun _____ at the sports ground.A. had he arrivedB. would he have arrivedC. did he arriveD. should he have arrived14.Bear is the most popular drink among male drinkers, _____ overall consumption is significantly higher thanthat of women.A. whoseB. whichC. thatD. what15.Peter, who had been driving all day, suggested _____ at the next town.A. to stopB. stoppingC. stopD. having stopped16.I didn't know the word. I had to _____ a dictionary.A. look outB. make outC. refer toD. go over17.In the _____ of the project not being a success, the investors would have to lose up to $30 million.A. faceB. timeC. eventD. course18.The growth of part time and flexible working patterns, and of training and retraining schemes, _____ morewomen to take advantage of employment opportunities.A. have allowedB. allowC. allowingD. allows19.These book, which you can get at any bookshop, will give you _____ you need.A. all the informationB. all the informationsC. all of informationD. all of the informations20.The clothes a person wears may express his _____ or social position.A. curiosityB. statusC. determinationD. siginicancePart II Reading Comprehension (40 points)Directions: There are four passages in this part. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.Passage 1People often say that the Englishman’s home is his castle. They mean that the home is very important and personal to him. Most people in Britain live in houses rather than flats, and many people own their homes. This means that they can make them personal; they can paint them, and change them in any way they like. Most houses have a garden, even if it is a very small one, and the garden is usually loved. The house and the garden are the private space of the individual.People usually like to mark their space. Are you sitting now in your home or on a train? Have you marked the space around yourself as yours? If you are on the train you may put your coat or small bag on the seat beside you. If you share a flat, you may have one corner or chair which is your own.Once I was traveling on a train to London. I was in a section for four people and there was a table between us. The man on the space on my side of the table at all. I was angry. Maybe he thought that he owned the whole table. I had read a book about non-verbal communication, so I took various papers out of my bag and put them on his briefcase! When I did this he stiffened and his eyes nearly popped out of his head. I had invaded his space! A few minutes later I took my papers off his case in order to read them. He immediately moved his case to his side of the table. Of course, it is possible that he just wanted to be helpful to me!If you are visiting anot her country, you may feel that you don’t have any private space. Hotel rooms look much the same in every country in the world. All day long, you share public spaces with other people. You see the local people in their private spaces and you feel lonely and “outside”. Local people can create their private spaces by talking about things you don’t know about. And you even feel that they like you to be outside them so that they will enjoy being inside even more! This is one of the difficulties of being a traveler! But if you understand it then it helps you. Haven’t you enjoyed being part of a group and “owning” a bit of space?21.The writer was angry as he was travelling on a train to London because_____.A.he had no place to sitB. someone had invaded his “space”C.too many people shared a section with himD.some other people talked about things he didn’t know about22.“… you feel lonely and ‘outside’ “in paragraph 4 means that_____.A. you are alone outside the house B, you feel lonely because you travel on your ownC. you are alone and therefore you go outside to have some funD. you feel lonely and you don’t belong to that place or that group of people23.In Paragraph 4 , the pronoun “them’ refers to(所指)“_____”.A.public spacesB. private spacesC. local peopleD. other countries24.Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?A. British people dislike marking their space.B. You always feel at home in another country.C. Most British people prefer living in houses to flats.D.You can’t m ark your private space in a foreign country.25.The main purpose of the passage is to tell readers to _____.A.own private spaces by living in housesB. have one corner of their own in public placesC. realize the importance of “space” in communicationD. create their private spaces by talking with local peoplePassage 2Since its founding in 1948,McDonald’s has grown from a family burger (汉堡包) stand to a global fast-food chain,with more than 30,000 locations in 118 countries.With 58 million daily customers worldwide, McDonald’s is now so ubiquitous around the globe that The Economist publishes a global ranking of currencies’ purchasing power based on the prices charged at the local McDonald’s, called the Big Mac Index (巨无霸指数). That's not to say that every nation carries the same menu items: choices vary widely depending on location. Some Asian locations serve fried shrimp in a Big Mac roll, while McDonald's in India doesn't serve beef at all, relying instead on burgers made from veggies, rice and beans.Not everyone in the world has been happy to greet Ronald McDonald when he moves to town. Many see McDonald’s as a symbol of American economic and cultural chauvinism (沙文主义) , and European nations inparticular have viewed American-style fast food as an insult to their national food. A French farmer, Jose Bove, became something of a national hero in 1999 after he and a group of people destroyed a McDonald's under construction to protest globalization and "bad food." The next year, a bomb detonated in a French McDonald’s, killing a 27-year-old employee. No one claimed responsibility.But regardl ess of whether you like their food or their policies, McDonald’s is still widely seen as one of the true pioneers of peaceful globalization.26.According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?A. McDonald’s was founded in 1948B. McDonald’s has opened its restaurants in every city of the world.C. McDonald’s has over 30,000 locations in the world now.D. McDonald’s was very small in scale in the beginning.27.The word “ubiquitous” in Paragraph 2 is most likely to mean_____.A. very crowdedB. very cleanC. existing everywhereD. occurring frequently28.From Paragraph 2,we can conclude that_____.A. McDonald’s designs its menu to suit the local peopleB. Millions of young adults got their first job with McDonald’sC. The McDonald’s menu sticks to old-fashioned favorites such as the Big MacD. The low prices of McDonald’s bring tens of millions of people through its doors every day29.What did Joes Bove and his people do in 1999 to protest against McDonald’s?A. They organized a strike.B. They protested outside a McDonald’s.C. They refused to go to a newly-built McDonald’s.D. They destroyed a McDonald’s under construction30.In _____, an employee died in a fatal bomb attack on a McDonald’s rest aurant in France.A.1998B. 1999C. 2000D. 2001Passage 3Jim Thorpe was a Native American. He was born in 1888 in an Indian Territory(印第安人保护区)that isnow Oklahoma. Like most Native American children then, he liked to fish, hunt, swim, and play games outdoors. he was healthy and strong, but he had very little formal education. In 1950, Jim Thorpe was named the greatest American football player. He was also an Olympic gold medal winner. But Thorpe had many tragedies in his life.Jim had a twin brother who died when he was nine years old. By the time he was 16, his mother and father were also dead. Jim then went to a special school in Pennsylvania for Native American children. There, he learned to read and write and also began to play sports. Jim was poor, so he left school for two years to earn some money. During this time, he played on a baseball team. The team paid him only $ 15 a week. Soon he returned to school tocomplete his education. Jim was a star athlete (运动员) in several sports, including baseball, running, and football.He won many awards for his athletic ability, mainly for football. In many games, he scored all or most of the points for his team.In 1912,when Jim Thorpe was 24 years old, he became part of the U.S. Olympic team. He competed in two very difficult events: the pentathlon and the decathlon. Both require great ability and strength. The pentathlon has five track and field events,including the long jump and the 1,500-meter race. The decathlon has ten track and field events,with running, jumping ,and throwing contests.People thought it was impossible for an athlete to compete in both the pentathlon and the decathlon. So everyone was surprised when Thorpe won gold medals in both events. When the King of Sweden presented Thorpe with his two gold medals, he said, “Sir, you are the greatest athlete in the world.” Thorpe was a simple and honest man. He just answered, “Thanks, King.”31.From the passage we learn that Jim Thorpe was born in _____.A. IndiaB. PennsylvaniaC. OklahomaD. Sweden32.According to the passage, most American Indian children loved all the following EXCEPTA. fishingB. huntingC. swimmingD. singing33.Jim Thorpe started to play sports _____.A. before he was nine years oldB. when he was 16 years’ oldC. when he was 24 years oldD. before his parents passed away34.The word “decathlon” in Paragraph 3 probably means _____.A. jumpingB. five track and field eventsC. throwingD. ten track and field events35.Which of the following is NOT TRUE?A. In 1912, Thorpe went back to finish his college education.B. Thorpe won two gold medals in the 1912 Olympic Games.C. Thorpe once played on a baseball team for money.D. In 1950, Thorpe was named the greatest American football player.Passage 4It can be really frustrating (使人沮丧的) for an overweight person to go to a gym and work out with a positiveattitude. All one has to do is walk by almost any nice gym and notice all the healthy, sweating, “skinny” members. Sometimes they stare at those of us who are, well, zaftig. It is easy to see the judgment behind their eyes. Who wants to put up with that?Many people are self-conscious of their bodies and feel isolated when joining workout classes or while exercising, especially if they are larger than most of the others in the group. Now the fitness industry is finallypaying attention. Popular gyms are catering(迎合)to overweight and weight conscious customers by dedicatingareas where the “skinny” people are no allowed.There are even gyms or programs that require members to be at least 50 pounds overweight to participate. Trainers recommend functional fitness as a practical goal, rather than six-pack abs(六块腹肌). They often use textmessages to stay in touch with customers.Often at these specialized gyms, the trainers are overweight themselves, or working on their own weight goals, and this can help those people with anxiety caused by poor body image. The equipment has been designed for useby larger people. Wider seats, more cushioning, no mirrors, and tinted (有色的)windows for privacy, are allimportant changes.Hopefully these types of gyms will successfully grow in numbers in the future. The idea is a very simple and potentially popular one. If it helps those of us who are bigger exercise more and improve our fitness level, it’s a step in the right direction.36.The word zaftig in Paragraph 1 is closest in meaning to _____.A. fatB. healthyC. friendlyD. polite37.We can infer from the first two paragraphs that_____.A. most large gym chains really don’t want member s to show up frequentlyB. overweight people are often frustrated and pushed away by traditional gym industryC. regular gyms don’t accept overweight people to participate in their programsD. overweight people have to pay extra to work out in a gym38.What is the training goal in the gyms catering to overweight members?A. To achieve functional fitness.B. To build six-pack abs.C. To look like a fitness model.D. To be able to run long distances.39.As for the gyms catering to overweight members, which of the following statements is NOT TRUE?A. The machines are designed for larger people.B. Tinted windows are used to ensure extra privacy.C. There are large mirrors on the walls.D. The training goals are more realistic.40.Which of the following is the best title for the passage?A. Improving Women’s Self-confidence through ExercisesB. The Traditional Gym Industry Is Losing Its CustomersC. The Fitness Industry Is Looking for New DirectionsD. Specialized Gyms Designed for Overweight PeoplePart III Cloze (10 points)Knowing why English people always look for an empty compartment and are unwilling to talk to strangers, I thought I was going to have a quiet trip to Scotland. That __41__ me as I had a lot of work to do in __42__ for my business meeting the following day. I always travel long distance by __43__ as I can sit down and work at a table and in any __44__ I find both driving and flying very nerve-racking and __45__.The journey turned __46__ to be something of a nightmare. Our train was __47__ by heavy snowfalls. When it became clear and rescue would take some time, everybody piled into one carriage to huddle together for warmth. So I spend the night singing and __48__ and listening to stories. We were airlifted out __49__ helicopter in the morning.Despite the __50__ on the way, I am glad I took the train as some of my colleagues, traveling by car, never arrived at the morning.41. A. happened B. suited C. occurred D. fitted42. A. preparation B. size C. store D. need43. A. car B. truck C. train D. flight44. A. event B. example C. condition D. case45. A. pleasing B. exhausting C. surprising D. interesting46. A. in B. on C. off D. out47. A. blocked B. discovered C. signed D. removed48. A. tell B. told C. telling D. to tell49. A. at B. by C. with D. on50. A. quietness B. trouble C. happiness D. rescuePart IV Translate from English to Chinese (20 points)Faces, like fingerprints, are unique. Did you ever wonder how it is possible for us to recognize people? (51)Even a skilled writer probably could not describe all the features that make one face different from another. Yet a very young child---or even an animal, such as a pigeon-can learn to recognize faces. We all take this ability for granted.We also tell people apart by how they behave. (52)When we talk about someone’s personality(个性), wemean the ways in which he or she acts, speaks, thinks and feels that make that individual different from others.Like the human face, human personality is very complex. (53)But describing someone’s personality inwords is somewhat easier than describing his face. if you were asked to describe what a “nice face” looked like, you probably would have a difficult time doing so. But if you were asked to describe a “nice person,” you might begin to think about someone who was kind, considerate, friendly, warm, and so forth.There are many words to describe how a person thinks, feels and acts. Gordon all ports, an Americanpsychologist, found nearly 18 000 English words characteri zing differences in people’s behavior. (54)And manyof us use this information as a basis for describing, or typing, his personality.Bookworms, conservatives, military types-people are described with such terms.People have always tried to “type” each other. Actors in early Greek drama wore ma sks to show the audience whether they played the villain’s (坏人) or the hero’s role. In fact, the words “person” and “personality” come from the Latin persona, meaning “mask.” Today, most television and movie actors do not wear masks. (55)But we caneasily tell the “good guys” from the “bad guys” because the two types differ in appearance as well as in actions.Part V Writing (30 points)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic: Why do We Work? You must base your composition on the following instructions given below. Your composition should be no less than 100 words.1.Some people live to work.2.Other people work to live.3.Your opinion答案Part I V ocabulary and Structure1-5 BBABB 6-10 BBADD11-15 ABCAB 16-20. CCDABPart II Reading Comprehension21-25 BDCCC 26-30 BCADC31-35 CDBDA 36-40 ABACDPart III Cloze41-45 BACDB 46-50 DACBBPart IV Translate from English to Chinese51.即便是经验丰富的作业也不可能把区别两个面孔的所有特点描述出来。
Big Mac Index

Economics focusMcCurrenciesMay 25th 2006From The Economist print editionHappy 20th birthday to our Big Mac indexWHEN our economics editor invented the Big Mac index in 1986 as a light-hearted introduction to exchange-rate theory, little did she think that 20 years later she would still be munching her way, a little less sylph-like, around the world. As burgernomics enters its third decade, the Big Mac index is widely used and abused around the globe. It is time to take stock of what burgers do and do not tell you about exchange rates.The Economist's Big Mac index is based on one of the oldest concepts in international economics: the theory of purchasing-power parity (PPP), which argues that in the long run, exchange rates should move towards levels that would equalise the prices of an identical basket of goods and services in any two countries. Our “basket” is a McDonald's Big Mac, produced in around 120 countries. The Big Mac PPP is the exchange rate that would leave burgers costing the same in America as elsewhere. Thus a Big Mac in China costs 10.5 yuan, against an average price in four American cities of $3.10 (see the first column of the table). To make the two prices equal would require an exchange rate of 3.39 yuan to the dollar, compared with a market rate of 8.03. In other words, the yuan is 58% “undervalued” against the dollar. To put it another way, converted into dollars at market rates the Chinese burger is the cheapest in the table.In contrast, using the same method, the euro and sterling are overvalued against the dollar, by 22% and 18% respectively; the Swiss and Swedish currencies are even more overvalued. On the other hand, despite its recent climb, the yen appears to be 28% undervalued, with a PPP of only ¥81 to the dollar. Note that all emerging-market currencies also look too cheap.The index was never intended to be a precise predictor of currency movements, simply a take-away guide to whether currencies are at their “correct” long-run level. Curiously, however, burgernomics has an impressive record in predicting exchange rates: currencies that show up as overvalued often tend to weaken in later years. But you must always remember the Big Mac's limitations. Burgers cannot sensibly be traded across borders and prices are distorted by differences in taxes and the cost of non-tradable inputs, such as rents.Despite our frequent health warnings, some American politicians are fond of citing the Big Mac index rather too freely when it suits their cause—most notably in their demands for a big appreciation of the Chinese currency in order to reduce America's huge trade deficit. But the cheapness of a Big Mac in China does not really prove that the yuan is being held far below its fair-market value. Purchasing-power parity is a long-run concept. It signals where exchange rates are eventually heading, but it says little about today's market-equilibrium exchange rate that would make the prices of tradable goods equal. A burger is a product of both traded and non-traded inputs.An idea to relishIt is quite natural for average prices to be lower in poorer countries than in developedones. Although the prices of tradable things should be similar, non-tradable services will be cheaper because of lower wages. PPPs are therefore a more reliable way to convertGDP per head into dollars than market exchange rates, because cheaper prices mean that money goes further. This is also why every poor country has an implied PPP exchange rate that is higher than today's market rate, making them all appear undervalued. Both theory and practice show that as countries get richer and their productivity rises, their real exchange rates appreciate. But this does not mean that a currency needs to rise massively today. Jonathan Anderson, chief economist at UBS in Hong Kong, reckons that the yuan is now only 10-15% below its fair-market value. Even over the long run, adjustment towards PPP need not come from a shift in exchange rates; relative prices can change instead. For example, since 1995, when the yen was overvalued by 100% according to the Big Mac index, the local price of Japanese burgers has dropped by one-third. In the same period, American burgers have become one-third dearer. Similarly, the yuan's future real appreciation could come through faster inflation in China than in the United States.The Big Mac index is most useful for assessing the exchange rates of countries withsimilar incomes per head. Thus, among emerging markets, the yuan does indeed look undervalued, while the currencies of Brazil, Turkey, Hungary and the Czech Republic look overvalued. Economists would be unwise to exclude Big Macs from their diet, but Super Size servings would equally be a mistakeBig Mac indexJan 12th 2006From The Economist print editionThe Economist's Big Mac index is based on the theory of purchasing-power parity, under whichexchange rates should adjust to equalise the cost of a basket of goods and services, wherever it is bought around the world. Our basket is the Big Mac. The cheapest burger in our chart is in China, where it costs $1.30, compared with an average American price of $3.15. This implies that the yuan is 59% undervalued.The Big Mac IndexFood for thoughtMay 27th 2004From The Economist print editionThe world economy looks very different once countries' output is adjusted for differences in pricesHOW fast is the world economy growing? How important is China as an engine of growth? How much richer is the average person in America than in China? The answers to these huge questions depend crucially on how you convert the value of output in different countries into a common currency. Converting national GDPs into dollars at market exchange rates is misleading. Prices tend to be lower in poor economies, so a dollar of spending in China, say, is worth a lot more than a dollar in America. A better method is to use purchasing-power parities (PPP), which take account of price differences.The theory of purchasing-power parity says that in the long run exchange rates should move towards rates that would equalise the prices of an identical basket of goods and services in any two countries. This is the thinking behind The Economist's Big Mac index. Invented in 1986 as a light-hearted guide to whether currencies are at their “correct” level, our “basket” is a McDonalds' Big Mac, which is produced locally in almost 120 countries.The Big Mac PPP is the exchange rate that would leave a burger in any country costing the same as in America. The first column of our table converts the local price of a Big Mac into dollars at current exchange rates. The average price of a Big Mac in four American cities is $2.90 (including tax). The cheapest shown in the table is in the Philippines ($1.23), the most expensive in Switzerland ($4.90). In other words, the Philippine peso is the world's most undervalued currency, the Swiss franc its most overvalued.The second column calculates Big Mac PPPs by dividing the local currency price by the American price. For instance, in Japan a Big Mac costs ¥262. Dividing this by the American price of $2.90 produces a dollar PPP against the yen of ¥90, compared with its current rate of ¥113, suggesting that the yen is 20% undervalued. In contrast, the euro (based on a weighted average of Big Mac prices in the euro area) is 13% overvalued. But perhaps the most interesting finding is that all emerging-market currencies are undervalued against the dollar. The Chinese yuan, on which much ink has been spilled in recent months, looks 57% too cheap.The Big Mac index was never intended as a precise forecasting tool. Burgers are not traded across borders as the PPP theory demands; prices are distorted by differences in the cost of non-tradable goods and services, such as rents.Yet these very failings make the Big Mac index useful, since looked at another way it can help to measure countries' differing costs of living. That a Big Mac is cheap in China does not in fact prove that the yuan is being held massively below its fair value, as many American politicians claim. It is quite natural for average prices to be lower in poorer countries and therefore for their currencies to appear cheap.The prices of traded goods will tend to be similar to those in developed economies. But the prices of non-tradable products, such as housing and labour-intensive services, are generally much lower. A hair-cut is, for instance, much cheaper in Beijing than in New York.One big implication of lower prices is that converting a poor country's GDP into dollars at market exchange rates will significantly understate the true size of its economy and its living standards. If China's GDP is converted into dollars using the Big Mac PPP, it is almost two-and-a-half-times bigger than if converted at the market exchange rate. Meatier and more sophisticated estimates of PPP, such as those used by the IMF, suggest that the required adjustment is even bigger.Weight watchersThe global economic picture thus looks hugely different when examined through a PPP lens. Take the pace of global growth. Anyone wanting to calculate this needs to bundle together countries' growth rates, with each one weighted according to its share of world GDP. Using weights based on market exchange rates, the world has grown by an annual average of only 1.9% over the past three years. Using PPP, as the IMF does, global growth jumps to a far more robust 3.1% a year.The main reason for this difference is that using PPP conversion factors almost doubles the weight of the emerging economies, which have been growing much faster. Measured at market exchange rates, emerging economies account for less than a quarter of global output. But measured using PPP they account for almost half.Small wonder, then, that global economic rankings are dramatically transformed when they are done on a PPP basis rather than market exchange rates. America remains number one, but China leaps from seventh place to second, accounting for 13% of world output. India jumps into fourth place ahead of Germany, and both Brazil and Russia are bigger than Canada. Similarly, market exchange rates also exaggerate inequality. Using market rates, the average American is 33 times richer than the average Chinese; on a PPP basis, he is “only” seven times richer.The way in which economies are measured also has a huge impact on which country has contributed most to global growth in recent years. Using GDP converted at market rates China has accounted for only 7% of the total increase in the dollar value of global GDP over the past three years, compared with America's 25%. But on PPP figures, China has accounted for almost one-third of global real GDP growth and America only 13%.This helps to explain why commodity prices in general and oil prices in particular have been surging, even though growth has been relatively subdued in the rich world since 2000. Emerging economies are not only growing much faster than rich economies and are more intensive in their use of raw materials and energy, but they also account for a bigger chunk of global output if measured correctly. As Charles Dumas, an economist at Lombard Street Research, neatly puts it, even if a Chinese loaf is a quarter of the cost of a loaf in America, it uses the same amount of flour.All measures of PPP are admittedly imperfect. But most economists agree that they give a more accurate measure of the relative size of economies than market exchange rates—and a better understanding of some of the dramatic movements in world markets. The humble burger should be part of every economist's diet.The Economist's Big Mac indexFast food and strong currenciesJun 9th 2005From The Economist print editionHow much burger do you get for your euro, yuan or Swiss franc?Italians like their coffee strong and their currencies weak. That, at least, is the conclusion one can draw from their latest round of grumbles about Europe's single currency. But are the Italians right to moan? Is the euro overvalued?Our annual Big Mac index (see table) suggests they have a case: the euro is overvalued by 17% against the dollar. How come? The euro is worth about $1.22 on the foreign-exchange markets. A Big Mac costs €2.92, on average, in the euro zone and $3.06 in the United States. The rate needed to equalise the burger's price in the two regions is just $1.05. To patrons of McDonald's, at least, the single currency is overpriced.The Big Mac index, which we have compiled since 1986, is based on the notion that a currency's price should reflect its purchasing power. According to the late, great economist Rudiger Dornbusch, this idea can be traced back to the Salamanca school in 16th-century Spain. Since then, he wrote, the doctrine of purchasing-power parity (PPP) has been variously seen as a “truism, an empirical regularity or a grossly misleading simplification.”Economists lost some faith in PPP as a guide to exchange rates in the 1970s, after the world's currencies abandoned their anchors to the dollar. By the end of the decade, exchange rates seemed to be drifting without chart or compass. Later studies showed that a currency's purchasing power does assert itself over the long run. But it might take three to five years for a misaligned exchange rate to move even halfway back into line. Our index shows that burger prices can certainly fall out of line with each other. If he could keep the burgers fresh, an ingenious arbitrageur could buy Big Macs for the equivalent of $1.27 in China, whose yuan is the most undervalued currency in our table, and sell them for $5.05 in Switzerland, whose franc is the most overvalued currency. The impracticality of such a trade highlights some of the flaws in the PPP idea. Trade barriers, transport costs and differences in taxes drive a wedge between prices in different countries.More important, the $5.05 charged for a Swiss Big Mac helps to pay for the retail space in which it is served, and for the labour that serves it. Neither of these two crucial ingredients can be easily traded across borders. David Parsley, of Vanderbilt University, and Shang-Jin Wei, of the International Monetary Fund, estimate that non-traded inputs, such as labour, rent and electricity, account for between 55% and 64% of the price of a Big Mac.The two economists disassemble the Big Mac into its separate ingredients. They find that the parts of the burger that are traded internationally converge towards purchasing-power parity quite quickly. Any disparity in onion prices will be halved in less than nine months, for example. But the non-traded bits converge much more slowly: a wage gap between countries has a “half-life” of almost 29 months.Seen in this light, our index provides little comfort to Italian critics of the single currency. If the euro buys less burger than it should, perhaps inflexible wages, not a strong currency, are to blame.The Hamburger Standard (based on Dec 16, 2004 BigMac Prices)BigMac PriceCountryin Local Currencyin USdollarsActualExchange Rate1 USD =Over(+) / Under(-)Valuation againstthe dollar, %PurchasingPower PriceUnited States $3.00 3.00 1.00 - - Argentina Peso4.75 1.6278 2.918 -45.8533 1.58 Australia A$3.20 2.4521 1.305 -18.0077 1.07Brazil Real5.45 2.3681 2.3014 -20.9177 1.82Britain £1.99 3.5811 1.7995‡ 18.7691 0.66 Canada C$3.20 2.7346 1.1702 -8.5626 1.07China Yuan10.50 1.2962 8.1008 -56.7944 3.50Euro area €2.80 3.3952 0.8247 12.7683 0.93Hong Kong HK$12.00 1.546 7.7621 -48.4676 4.00 Hungary Forint523 2.572 203.34 -14.429 174.33 Indonesia Rupiah14,545 1.424 10214 -52.5357 4,848.33 Japan ¥260 2.3229 111.93 -22.5409 86.70 Malaysia M$5.10 1.3468 3.7867 -55.106 1.70 Mexico Peso24.0 2.2155 10.833 -26.1516 8.00New Zealand NZ$4.50 3.1427 1.4319 4.7559 1.50 Poland Zloty6.40 1.9964 3.2058 -33.5579 2.13 Russia Rouble41.501.4617 28.391 -51.2874 13.83 Singapore s$3.602.1378 1.684 -28.7411 1.20South Africa Rand14.05 2.185 6.4302 -27.2184 4.68South Korea Won2,500 2.4117 1036.6 -19.6411 833 Sweden Skr30.0 3.8941 7.704 29.8027 10 Switzerland SFr6.23 4.8638 1.2809 62.3858 2.08 Taiwan NT$75.25 2.2733 33.1015 -24.233 25.08 Thailand Baht60.0 1.4593 41.115 -51.356 20.00‡ Dollars per poundPurchasing Power Parity (PPP): is a measure of the relative purchasing power ofdifferent currencies. It is measured by the price of the same goods in different countries, translated by the exchange rate of that country's currency against a "base currency".How to read this table:In this case, the goods is the Big Mac. The first column of the table shows local-currency prices of a Big Mac. The second converts the prices into dollars using exchange rates(third column): The cheapest Big Macs is now in China, where it costs $1.30. At the other extreme, Big Mac fans in Switzerland have to pay $4.86.Given that Americans in four cities pay an average of $3.00, the yuan looks massively undervalued, the Swiss franc massively overvalued. The Over/Under valuation againstthe dollar (fourth column) is calculated as:(PPP - Exchange Rate)---------------------------------- x 100Exchange RateThe fifth column calculates Big Mac PPPs. For example, dividing the Japanese price (¥260) by the American price ($3.00) gives a dollar PPP of ¥86.70. On December 16th 2004, the exchange rate was ¥111.93, implying that the yen is 22.5% undervalued against the dollar.If the actual exchange rate is lower, then the BigMac theory says that you should expect the value of the Yen to go up until it reaches the PPP exchange rate. If the actual exchange rate is higher, then the BigMac theory says that you should expect the value of the Yen to go down until it reaches the PPP exchange rate.。
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The Big Mac Index Food for thoughtMay 27th 2004From The Economist print editionThe world economy looks very different once countries' output is adjusted for differences in pricesHOW fast is the world economy growing? How important is China as an engine of growth? How much richer is the average person in America than in China? The answers to these huge questions depend crucially on how you convert the value of output in different countries into a commoncurrency. Converting national GDPs into dollars at market exchange rates is misleading. Prices tend to be lower in poor economies, so a dollar of spending in China, say, is worth a lot more than a dollar in America. A better method is to use purchasing-power parities (PPP), which take account of price differences.The theory of purchasing-power parity says that in the long run exchange rates should movetowards rates that would equalise the prices of an identical basket of goods and services in any two countries. This is the thinking behind The Economist's Big Mac index. Invented in 1986 as a light-hearted guide to whether currencies are at their “correct” level, our “basket” is a McDonalds' Big Mac, which is produced locally in almost 120 countries.The Big Mac PPP is the exchange rate that would leave a burger in any country costing the same as in America. The first column of our table converts the local price of a Big Mac into dollars at current exchange rates. The average price of a Big Mac in four American cities is $2.90 (including tax). Thecheapest shown in the table is in the Philippines ($1.23), the most expensive in Switzerland($4.90). In other words, the Philippine peso is the world's most undervalued currency, the Swissfranc its most overvalued.The second column calculates Big Mac PPPs by dividing the local currency price by the American price. For instance, in Japan a Big Mac costs ¥262. Dividing this by the American price of $2.90 produces a dollar PPP against the yen of ¥90, compared with its current rate of ¥113, suggesting that the yen is 20% undervalued. In contrast, the euro (based on a weighted average of Big Mac prices in the euro area) is 13% overvalued. But perhaps the most interesting finding is that all emerging-market currencies are undervalued against the dollar. The Chinese yuan, on which much ink has been spilled in recent months, looks 57% too cheap.The Big Mac index was never intended as a precise forecasting tool. Burgers are not traded across borders as the PPP theory demands; prices are distorted by differences in the cost of non-tradable goods and services, such as rents.Yet these very failings make the Big Mac index useful, since looked at another way it can help to measure countries' differing costs of living. That a Big Mac is cheap in China does not in fact prove that the yuan is being held massively below its fair value, as many American politicians claim. It is quite natural for average prices to be lower in poorer countries and therefore for their currencies to appear cheap.The prices of traded goods will tend to be similar to those in developed economies. But the prices of non-tradable products, such as housing and labour-intensive services, are generally much lower. A hair-cut is, for instance, much cheaper in Beijing than in New York.One big implication of lower prices is that converting a poor country's GDP into dollars at market exchange rates will significantly understate the true size of its economy and its living standards. If China's GDP is converted into dollars using the Big Mac PPP, it is almost two-and-a-half-times bigger than if converted at the market exchange rate. Meatier and more sophisticated estimates of PPP, such as those used by the IMF, suggest that the required adjustment is even bigger.Weight watchersThe global economic picture thus looks hugely different when examined through a PPP lens. Take the pace of global growth. Anyone wanting to calculate this needs to bundle together countries' growth rates, with each one weighted according to its share of world GDP. Using weights based on market exchange rates, the world has grown by an annual average of only 1.9% over the past three years. Using PPP, as the IMF does, global growth jumps to a far more robust 3.1% a year.The main reason for this difference is that using PPP conversion factors almost doubles the weight of the emerging economies, which have been growing much faster. Measured at market exchange rates, emerging economies account for less than a quarter of global output. But measured using PPP they account for almost half.Small wonder, then, that global economic rankings are dramatically transformed when they are done on a PPP basis rather than market exchange rates. America remains number one, but China leaps from seventh place to second, accounting for 13% of world output. India jumps into fourth place ahead of Germany, and both Brazil and Russia are bigger than Canada. Similarly, market exchange rates also exaggerate inequality. Using market rates, the average American is 33 times richer than the average Chinese; on a PPP basis, he is “only” seven times richer.The way in which economies are measured also has a huge impact on which country has contributed most to global growth in recent years. Using GDP converted at market rates China has accounted for only 7% of the total increase in the dollar value of global GDP over the past three years, compared with America's 25%. But on PPP figures, China has accounted for almost one-third of global real GDP growth and America only 13%.This helps to explain why commodity prices in general and oil prices in particular have been surging, even though growth has been relatively subdued in the rich world since 2000. Emerging economies are not only growing much faster than rich economies and are more intensive in their use of raw materials and energy, but they also account for a bigger chunk of global output if measured correctly. As Charles Dumas, an economist at Lombard Street Research, neatly puts it, even if a Chinese loaf is a quarter of the cost of a loaf in America, it uses the same amount of flour.All measures of PPP are admittedly imperfect. But most economists agree that they give a more accurate measure of the relative size of economies than market exchange rates—and a better understanding of some of the dramatic movements in world markets. The humble burger should be part of every economist's diet.Copyright © 2004 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All rights reserved.。