Like all quintessentially British things, gardening is a pastime that has long been in decline. From a high point of £5 billion

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问题     Like all quintessentially British things, gardening is a pastime that has long been in decline. From a high point of £5 billion in 2001, spending on plants, tools and garden furniture has fallen every year since then, to around ~3 billion in 2008.The arrival of economic recession only deepened the gloom: to credit-crunched consumers, shrubs and hanging baskets seemed obvious candidates for cuts.  
    Yet the latest figures from the Horticultural Trades Association (HTA) suggest a bumper year for garden-related expenditure is in the making. Sales volumes were up by 21% in March and 28% in April compared with the same months a year earlier. This was not the result of deep discounting, a strategy that many other retailers have been adopting. The value of garden goods sold was 37% higher in March and 42% higher in April than a year earlier, whereas the value of all sales had increased by just 3% in April. Datamonitor, a market-research firm, reckons that gardening will continue to outperform the rest of retailing for at least the next two years.  
    Much of the good news is due to the weather, admits Tim Briercliffe, the HTA’s director of business development. Last year the vital spring months were damp and miserable; this year sunshine (and weathermen’s prediction of a hot summer) has boosted custom.  But the economic downturn itself has turned out to be as much a blessing as a curse. Gardening may be a luxury, argues Mr. Briercliffe, but it competes with other, more expensive luxuries. "People who might have otherwise booked a city break to Prague are staying at home and making the best of what they have," he maintains. According to Ipsos MORI, a pollster, three-quarters of people plan to spend at least as much on their garden this year as last.  
    Economic hardship has created a new breed of gardener too. Partly, that reflects people making the most of their enforced leisure: "We get some unemployed city types who are just filling time while looking for another job," admits a garden-centre worker near the London commuter town of Guilford. But there are more positive developments. Much of the growth in garden spending has come from the under-35s, not traditionally a green-fingered demographic. One explanation is that environmentalism and thriftiness have made growing vegetables trendy, an idea that is supported by growing shortage of allotments.  
    But there is more to it than pleasant weather and belt-tightening.  The HTA detects deeper, and darker, changes in the national psyche.  Citing research from the Future Foundation, a prognosticatory consultancy, it reckons that people are spending more time in their homes, fortifying them into havens from an unwelcoming world haunted by crime, bureaucracy and rising unemployment. The longer the downturn persists, the greener the grass may grow.
Which of the following is right according to the 2nd paragraph?

选项 A、Garden-related expenditure this year is more or less the same as that of last year.
B、Many retailers are offering deep discounts.
C、Prices of garden goods tend to remain stable in recent years.
D、Due to the status quo of economy, garden goods are not promised a bright future.

答案B

解析 选项A,文中说园艺相关支出正在持续增长,故错误;选项B,根据“This was not the result of deep discounting,a strategy that many other retailers have been adopting”可推断B正确;选项C,文中说价格正在增长(37%higher in March and 42%higher in April),故错误;选项D,根据“gardening will continue to outperform the rest of retailing for at leas the next two years”(至少在未来两年内,园艺商品的销量将会好于其它零售商品),可以推断其说园艺产品将来销量不好是不符合文意的。   
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