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    In the past, falling oil prices have given a boost to the world economy, but recent forecasts for global growth have been toned down, even as oil prices sink lower and lower. Does that mean the link between lower oil prices and growth has weakened?

    Some experts say there are still good reasons to believe cheap oil should heat up the world economy. Consumers have more money in their pockets when they’re paying less at the pump. They spend that money on other things, which stimulates the economy.

    The biggest gains go to countries that import most of their oil like China, Japan, and India. But doesn’t the extra money in the pockets of those countries’consumers mean an equal loss in oil-producing countries, cancelling out the gains? Not necessarily, says economic researcher Sara Johnson. “Many oil producers built up huge reserve funds when prices were high, so when prices fall they will draw on their reserves to support government spending and subsidies (补贴) for their consumers.”

    But not all oil producers have big reserves. In Venezuela, collapsing oil prices have sent its economy into free-fall.

    Economist Carl Weinberg believes the negative effects of plunging oil prices are overwhelming the positive effects of cheaper oil. The implication is a sharp decline in global trade, which has plunged partly because oil-producing nations can't afford to import as much as they used to.

    Sara Johnson acknowledges that the global economic benefit from a fall in oil prices today is likely lower than it was in the past. One reason is that more countries are big oil producers now, so the nations suffering from the prices drop account for a larger share of the global economy.

    Consumers, in the U.S. at least, are acting cautiously with the savings they’re getting at the gas pump, as the memory of the recent great recession is still fresh in their mind. And a number of oil-producing countries are trimming their gasoline subsidies and raising taxes, so the net savings for global consumers is not as big as the oil price plunge might suggest.

What happens in many oil-exporting countries when oil prices go down?

A
They suspend import of necessities from overseas.
B
They reduce production drastically to boost oil prices.
C
They use their money reserves to back up consumption.
D
They try to stop their economy from going into free-fall.
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答案:

C

解析:

53. C)They use their money reserves to back up consumption.

解析:本题属于细节题。通过when oil prices go down定位至第三段最后的引语部分,“Many oil producers built up huge reserve funds when prices were high, so when prices fall they will draw on their reserves to support government spend and subsidies for their consumers”,后半句中指出,价格下调了,他们就会利用储备资金来支撑政府支出并补贴消费者。C选项中money reserves对应原文中的reserves,back up对应support,consumptions对应consumers,因此C是正确答案。

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