首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Economics What is the professor’s opinion about the dot-com crash?
Economics What is the professor’s opinion about the dot-com crash?
admin
2014-09-29
60
问题
Economics
What is the professor’s opinion about the dot-com crash?
Economics
Narrator
Listen to part of a lecture in an economics class.
Professor
Now, when I mention the terms "boom" and "bust," what does that bring to mind?
Male student
The dot-com crash of the ’90s!
Professor
OK. The boom in the late 1990s when all those new Internet companies sprang up and were then sold for huge amounts of money. Then the bust around 2000 .. . 2001, when many of those same Internet companies went out of business. Of course, booms aren’t always followed by busts—we’ve certainly seen times when local economies expanded rapidly for a while then went back to a normal pace of growth. But, there’s a type of rapid expansion, what might be called a "hysterical" or irrational boom that pretty much always leads to a bust. See, people often create and intensify a boom when they get carried away by some new industry that seems like it’ll make ’em lots
of money, fast. You’d think that by the ’90s, people would’ve learned from the past. If they did—well, look at tulips.
Male student
Tulips ...? You mean, like, the flower?
Professor
Exactly. For instance, do you have any idea where tulips are from? Originally, I mean.
Male student
Well, the Netherlands, right?
Professor
That’s what most people think—but no, they’re not native to the Netherlands, or even Europe. Tulips actually hail from an area the Chinese call the "Celestial Mountains" in central Asia—a very remote mountainous region.
It was Turkish nomads who first discovered tulips and spread them slowly westward. Now, around the sixteenth century, Europeans were traveling to Istanbul in Turkey as merchants and diplomats. And the Turks often gave the Europeans tulip bulbs as gifts, which they would carry home with them. For the Europeans, tulips were totally unheard of, a great novelty. The first bulbs to show up in the Netherlands, the merchant who received them roasted and ate them—he thought they were a kind of onion.
It turns out that the Netherlands was an ideal country for growing tulips. It had the right kind of sandy soil, for one thing, but also it was a wealthy nation with a growing economy, willing to spend lots of money on new, exotic things—plus the Dutch had a history of gardening. Wealthy people would compete, spending enormous amounts of money to buy the rarest flowers for their gardens.
Soon tulips were beginning to show up in different colors as growers tried to breed them specifically for colors which would make them even more valuable, but they were never completely sure what they would get. Some of the most prized tulips were white with purple streaks or red with yellow streaks on the petals—even a dark purple tulip that was very much prized. What happened then was a craze for these specialized tulips. We call that craze "tulip mania."
So—here we’ve got all the conditions for an-an irrational boom: a prospering economy, so more people had more disposable income—money to spend on luxuries—but they weren’t experienced at investing their new wealth. Then along comes a thrilling new commodity—sure, the first specimens were just plain old red tulips, but they could be bred into some extraordinary variations—like that dark purple tulip. And finally, you have an unregulated marketplace—no government constraints—where prices could explode. And explode they did, starting in the 1630s.
There was always much more demand for tulips than supply. Tulips didn’t bloom frequently like roses; tulips bloomed once in the early spring and that was it for the year. Eventually, specially bred, multicolored tulips became so valuable . . . Well, according to records, one tulip bulb was worth 24 tons of wheat or a thousand pounds of cheese. One particular tulip bulb was sold in exchange for a small ship! In other words, tulips were literally worth their weight in gold.
As demand grew, people began selling promissory notes guaranteeing the future delivery of prized tulip bulbs. The buyers of these pieces of paper would resell the notes at marked-up prices. These promissory notes kept changing hands—from buyer to buyer—until the tulip was ready for delivery. But it was all pure speculation, because, as I said, there was no way to know if the bulb was really going to produce the variety, the color, that was promised. But that didn’t matter to the owner of the note, the owner only cared about having that piece of paper, so it could be traded later at a profit. And people were borrowing—mortgaging their homes, in many cases—to obtain those bits of paper because they were sure they’d found an easy way to make money.
So now you’ve got all the ingredients for a huge bust—and bust it did, when one cold February morning in 1637, a group of bulb traders got together and discovered that suddenly there were no bidders—nobody wanted to buy. Panic spread like wildfire, and the tulip market collapsed totally.
选项
A、She thinks that people should have realized it would happen.
B、She does not believe that anything like it will happen again.
C、She is surprised that it did not have more serious consequences.
D、She is confident that people learned a valuable lesson from it.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/IGfO777K
0
托福(TOEFL)
相关试题推荐
Completethetablebelow.WriteNOMORETHANTHREEWORDSforeachanswer.
Completetheformbelow.WriteNOMORETHANTHREEWORDSAND/ORNUMBERforeachanswer.YOUNGELECTRONIC
ChooseTWOletters,A-E.WhatTWOthingsdoBradandHelenagreeareweakpointsinthearticle’ssectiononconflictresolution
ChooseTWOletters,A-E.WhatTWOmaincriteriaareusedtojudgethefilmcompetition?AAbilitytopersuade.BQualityofth
ChooseTWOletters,A-E.WhichTWOproblemsdoesSamidentifyconcerningthelecturers?APunctuality.BOrganisation.CAcce
Listentothedirectionsandmatchtheplacesinquestions11-15totheappropriateplaceamongA-Eonthemap.TheComplaint
Listentothedirectionsandmatchtheplacesinquestions11-15totheappropriateplaceamongA-Eonthemap.StudentCentre
Completethenotesbelow.WriteNOMORETHANTHREEWORDSforeachanswer.GIVINGASPEECHReasonsfornervousnessLecturers
Whatisthemainopinionofeachofthefollowingpeople?ChooseFIVEanswersfromtheboxandwritethecorrectletter,A-G,ne
随机试题
气血两虚可导致的异常舌象有
城市中卫生条件最好的地段应配置
A、甲状腺疼痛B、甲状腺触诊质硬C、多见于老年人D、宜手术治疗E、易合并甲状腺癌淡漠型甲亢
能治肝热目赤肿痛的药物有
知图5-9所示等直杆的轴力图(图中集中荷载单位为kN,分布荷载单位为kN/m),则该杆相应的荷载为()。
老市区主要依()和通信总量划分等级。
背景国家拟投资1.5亿元建设某大型炼油装置及附属罐区工程项目,工程内容包括:土建工程、给水排水管网、供热系统管网、通风与空调系统管网、燃气管道系统、塔类设备、金属储罐、工艺管道、电气仪表等工程。建设项目建议书批准后对该项目进行了技术和经
公安机关及其人民警察在执行职务活动中是否依法履行职责是公安执法监督的内容之一。( )
为了使货币的供应量和需求量趋于平衡,要通过()的办法来解决。
西周末年思想家史伯说“和实生物,同则不继,以它平它谓之和,故能丰长而物归之”。这里包含的辩证法思想有()
最新回复
(
0
)