单项选择题

根据下列资料。回答51-55题。

金融:2010年年末北京市金融机构(含外资)本外币存款余额37700.3亿元,比年初增加3893.6亿元,增加额比上年减少911亿元,贷款余额19861.5亿元,比年初增加2408.1亿元,按可比口径计算,增加额比上年减少470亿元,其中,人民币个人消费贷款2575.5亿元,比年初增加331.6亿元,增加额比上年多284.5亿元。
证券:全年证券市场各类证券成交额97978.7亿元,比上年增长4倍.其中股票成交额77487.8亿元,增长4.2倍;基金成交额1535亿元,增长4.1倍;债券成交额2060.1亿元,下降0.7%。
2010年年末股票市场累计开户数314.9万户。比上年年末增长66.3%。
保险:2010年年末北京市有各类保险公司91家,比上年年末增加10家.全年实现原保险保费收人498.1亿元,比上年增长21%。其中,财产保险费收入111.7亿元,增长32.5%;寿险保费收入334.4亿元,增长21.3%;健康险和意外伤害险保费收入51.9亿元,增长0.71%。全年各类保险赔付支出135.4亿元,比上年增长61.2%。其中财产险赔款49.7亿元.增长27.7%;寿险业务给付73.2亿元,增长128%;健康险和意外伤害险赔款及给付12.5亿元,下降3.8%。

2010年年末北京市金融机构本外币存款余额是2008年年末的()。

A.130%
B.107%
C.1.22倍
D.1.33倍

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单项选择题

根据以下资料。回答46-50题。
2012年一季度.北京市旅游市场开局良好,旅游总收入和接待旅游总人数同步增长。
一季度。北京市共接待旅游总人数4371.5万人次,比上年同期增长9.3%。实现旅游总收入692.2亿元,增长9.0%。其中,接待国内旅游人数4269.1万人次,增长9.3%,实现国内旅游收入622.9亿元,增长9.0%。接待入境旅游人数102.4万人次,增长9.2%,其中,接待外国游客87.9万人次,增长10.3%。实现旅游外汇收入10.7亿美元,增长9.2%。
从三大主要客源国接待量来看,一季度,累计接待美国、韩国、日本人境游客占全市入境游客总数的34.8%。其中,接待美国游客14.7万人次,增长6.9%;接待日本游客10.7万人次,增长25.7%:接待韩国游客10.4万人次,下降0.4%。
从洲际客源市场来看,一季度,累计接待各大洲的入境游客数量全面增长。其中,接待亚洲游客37.3万人次,增长12.4%;接待欧洲游客25.4万人次,增长9.8%;接待美洲游客19.7万人次,增长7.4%;接待大洋洲游客3.5万人次,增长28.9%;接待非洲游客1.3万人次,增长30.9%。如图所示:

根据资料,下列说法中错误的是()。

A.2012年第一季度,北京市接待入境游客人数同比增长8.6万人次
B.2011年第一季度,北京市接待亚洲游客比欧洲游客多10.9万人次
C.2012年第一季度,北京市接待日本入境游客占入境游客总数的10.4%
D.2011年第一季度,北京市实现国内旅游收入571.5亿元

单项选择题

根据下列资料。回答51-55题。

金融:2010年年末北京市金融机构(含外资)本外币存款余额37700.3亿元,比年初增加3893.6亿元,增加额比上年减少911亿元,贷款余额19861.5亿元,比年初增加2408.1亿元,按可比口径计算,增加额比上年减少470亿元,其中,人民币个人消费贷款2575.5亿元,比年初增加331.6亿元,增加额比上年多284.5亿元。
证券:全年证券市场各类证券成交额97978.7亿元,比上年增长4倍.其中股票成交额77487.8亿元,增长4.2倍;基金成交额1535亿元,增长4.1倍;债券成交额2060.1亿元,下降0.7%。
2010年年末股票市场累计开户数314.9万户。比上年年末增长66.3%。
保险:2010年年末北京市有各类保险公司91家,比上年年末增加10家.全年实现原保险保费收人498.1亿元,比上年增长21%。其中,财产保险费收入111.7亿元,增长32.5%;寿险保费收入334.4亿元,增长21.3%;健康险和意外伤害险保费收入51.9亿元,增长0.71%。全年各类保险赔付支出135.4亿元,比上年增长61.2%。其中财产险赔款49.7亿元.增长27.7%;寿险业务给付73.2亿元,增长128%;健康险和意外伤害险赔款及给付12.5亿元,下降3.8%。

下列说法中正确的是()。 I.2010年北京市金融机构外币存贷款余额增加值均比2009年减少。 Ⅱ.2010年北京市证券市场全面开花,各部分增长都很大。 Ⅲ.2010年北京市各种保险保费收入与赔付支出的比例最大的是寿险业务。

A.I、Ⅲ
B.Ⅱ、Ⅲ
C.I、Ⅱ、Ⅲ
D.I、Ⅱ.

单项选择题

根据以下资料,回答56-60题。
采购经理指数(PMI),是通过对企业采购经理的月度调查结果统计汇总编制而成的指数。
PMI体系涵盖了企业采购、生产、流通等各个环节,新订单、生产率、雇员、供应商配送时间、库存等商业活动指标反映了商业活动的现实情况。综合指数则反映制造业或服务业的整体增长或衰退。调查采用非定量的问卷形式,被调查者对每个问题只需做出定性的判断,在(比上月)上升、不变或下降三种答案中选择一种。综合汇总就是统计各类答案的百分比,通过各指标的动态变化来反映经济活动所处的周期状态。
2012年2月,中国制造业采购经理指数为51.O%,比上月小幅提升0.5个百分点,连续3个月位于50%扩张与收缩的临界点以上,同期的新订单指数为51.0%,比上月回升0.6个百分点。这说明国际市场有一定的回暖,外部市场需求有了一定的增长;同时受到季节性因素影响,春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来。尽管如此,内需相对来讲还比较疲软。同时,数据显示,2012年下半年开始,受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩。市场普遍预计,2012年中国外贸出口形势严峻。

根据上述材料可知,PMI指数强弱的分界点是()。

A.50%
B.51%
C.50.5%
D.51.5%

单项选择题

根据以下资料,回答56-60题。
采购经理指数(PMI),是通过对企业采购经理的月度调查结果统计汇总编制而成的指数。
PMI体系涵盖了企业采购、生产、流通等各个环节,新订单、生产率、雇员、供应商配送时间、库存等商业活动指标反映了商业活动的现实情况。综合指数则反映制造业或服务业的整体增长或衰退。调查采用非定量的问卷形式,被调查者对每个问题只需做出定性的判断,在(比上月)上升、不变或下降三种答案中选择一种。综合汇总就是统计各类答案的百分比,通过各指标的动态变化来反映经济活动所处的周期状态。
2012年2月,中国制造业采购经理指数为51.O%,比上月小幅提升0.5个百分点,连续3个月位于50%扩张与收缩的临界点以上,同期的新订单指数为51.0%,比上月回升0.6个百分点。这说明国际市场有一定的回暖,外部市场需求有了一定的增长;同时受到季节性因素影响,春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来。尽管如此,内需相对来讲还比较疲软。同时,数据显示,2012年下半年开始,受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩。市场普遍预计,2012年中国外贸出口形势严峻。

根据上述材料,以下说法错误的是()。

A.我国制造业经济总体继续保持稳定增长
B.与往年同期相比,2012年2月我国制造业经济总体增长幅度较为平缓
C.与2012年1月相比,2012年2月构成制造业PMI的5个分类指数3升2降
D.2011年12月制造业PMI指数的环比增长速度快于2012年1月的制造业PMI指数的环比增长速度

单项选择题

根据以下资料,回答56-60题。
采购经理指数(PMI),是通过对企业采购经理的月度调查结果统计汇总编制而成的指数。
PMI体系涵盖了企业采购、生产、流通等各个环节,新订单、生产率、雇员、供应商配送时间、库存等商业活动指标反映了商业活动的现实情况。综合指数则反映制造业或服务业的整体增长或衰退。调查采用非定量的问卷形式,被调查者对每个问题只需做出定性的判断,在(比上月)上升、不变或下降三种答案中选择一种。综合汇总就是统计各类答案的百分比,通过各指标的动态变化来反映经济活动所处的周期状态。
2012年2月,中国制造业采购经理指数为51.O%,比上月小幅提升0.5个百分点,连续3个月位于50%扩张与收缩的临界点以上,同期的新订单指数为51.0%,比上月回升0.6个百分点。这说明国际市场有一定的回暖,外部市场需求有了一定的增长;同时受到季节性因素影响,春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来。尽管如此,内需相对来讲还比较疲软。同时,数据显示,2012年下半年开始,受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩。市场普遍预计,2012年中国外贸出口形势严峻。

导致我国制造业PMI指数增长的原因可能是()。

A.企业集中开工,加快生产,采购活动趋于活跃
B.劳动力工资水平提高.以及石油等大宗商品价格上涨
C.制造业主要原材料库存继续减少,且降幅有所加大
D.“春节”刚过,部分企业工人不能及时到岗

单项选择题

根据以下资料,回答56-60题。
采购经理指数(PMI),是通过对企业采购经理的月度调查结果统计汇总编制而成的指数。
PMI体系涵盖了企业采购、生产、流通等各个环节,新订单、生产率、雇员、供应商配送时间、库存等商业活动指标反映了商业活动的现实情况。综合指数则反映制造业或服务业的整体增长或衰退。调查采用非定量的问卷形式,被调查者对每个问题只需做出定性的判断,在(比上月)上升、不变或下降三种答案中选择一种。综合汇总就是统计各类答案的百分比,通过各指标的动态变化来反映经济活动所处的周期状态。
2012年2月,中国制造业采购经理指数为51.O%,比上月小幅提升0.5个百分点,连续3个月位于50%扩张与收缩的临界点以上,同期的新订单指数为51.0%,比上月回升0.6个百分点。这说明国际市场有一定的回暖,外部市场需求有了一定的增长;同时受到季节性因素影响,春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来。尽管如此,内需相对来讲还比较疲软。同时,数据显示,2012年下半年开始,受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩。市场普遍预计,2012年中国外贸出口形势严峻。

新订单指数有所上升的原因是()。

A.外围市场的情况不容乐观
B.受到季节性因素影响。春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来
C.受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩
D.我国进口需求有所降低

单项选择题

根据以下资料,回答56-60题。
采购经理指数(PMI),是通过对企业采购经理的月度调查结果统计汇总编制而成的指数。
PMI体系涵盖了企业采购、生产、流通等各个环节,新订单、生产率、雇员、供应商配送时间、库存等商业活动指标反映了商业活动的现实情况。综合指数则反映制造业或服务业的整体增长或衰退。调查采用非定量的问卷形式,被调查者对每个问题只需做出定性的判断,在(比上月)上升、不变或下降三种答案中选择一种。综合汇总就是统计各类答案的百分比,通过各指标的动态变化来反映经济活动所处的周期状态。
2012年2月,中国制造业采购经理指数为51.O%,比上月小幅提升0.5个百分点,连续3个月位于50%扩张与收缩的临界点以上,同期的新订单指数为51.0%,比上月回升0.6个百分点。这说明国际市场有一定的回暖,外部市场需求有了一定的增长;同时受到季节性因素影响,春节期间累计的订单在2月份体现出来。尽管如此,内需相对来讲还比较疲软。同时,数据显示,2012年下半年开始,受困于欧债危机持续发酵以及美国经济复苏乏力,欧美市场需求明显收缩。市场普遍预计,2012年中国外贸出口形势严峻。

不能从材料中推测出的信息是()。

A.2012年年初,我国工业经济回调渐稳的态势进一步明确
B.2011年中国制造业活动整体保持扩张态势
C.2012年1~2月。中国制造业的劳动生产率有所提高
D.我国小企业发展势头趋于好转

单项选择题

Questions 102-106refer to the following passage.
Rising wages -- together with currency fluctuations and high fuel costs -- are eating away the once-formidable"China price" advantage, prompting thousands of factory owners to flee the Pearl River Delta. Much has been written about the more than doubling of wages at the Shenzhen factory of Foxconn, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, which produces Apple iPhones and iPads and employs 920,000 people in China alone. "One can talk about a world pre-and post-Foxconn," says Victor Fung, chairman of Li & Fung, the world's biggest sourcing company and a supplier of Wal-Mart. "Foxconn is as important as that."
Foxconn's wage increases are only the most dramatic. Our analysis suggests that, since February, minimum wages have climbed more than 20 percent in 20 Chinese regions and up to 30percent in some, including Sichuan. At a Guangdong Province factory supplying Honda, wages have risen an astonishing 47 percent. All this is bad news for companies operating in the world's manufacturing hub, and chief executives should assume that double-digit annual rises -- if not on the scale witnessed this year -- are here to stay.
Looked at another way, however, wage inflation provides companies with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink radically the way they approach global production -- and they should do so sooner rather than later.
Why the urgency? After all, wage hikes in China are nothing new. Since 1990, they have risen by an average of 13 percent a year in U.S. dollar terms and 19 percent annually in the past five years.
There are two big reasons and the situation is different now. The first has to do with productivity. Over the past 20 years, productivity increases have broadly matched wage increase,negating their impact. The pay rises came from a very low base, so while average wages grew 19 percent a year from 2005 to 2010, this amounted to only ~260 a month per employee, a sum that could be offset by more efficient production or switching to cheaper sources zf parts and materials.
If labor costs continue, however, to increase at 19 percent a year for another five years,monthly wages would grew ~623 per month, according to BCG estimates. Such an increase would ripple through the economy in the form of higher prices for components, business services, cargo-handling and office staff.
The second reason relates to societal change. Until now, it has been easy to lure a seemingly unlimited number of young, low-wage workers to the richer coastal regions and house them cheaply in dormitories until they saved enough to return home to their families in the interior provinces. In the future, though, young workers will be harder to recruit. This is partly because there will be few-er of them: Largely because of the country's one-child policy, the number of Chinese aged 15 to 29 will start declining in 2011. Moreover, with living standards rising across China, fewer of today's rural youth will want to go to coastal regions to toil for 60 hours a week on an assembly line and live in a cramped dormitory.
So what can CEOs do in this fast-changing environment? An instinctive reaction is to search for cheaper labor elsewhere. But this is short-sighted and would provide -- at best -- a short-term fix. Another option is to stay in China and try to squeeze out greater productivity gains.

 According to paragraph 1 and 2, we can summarize that().

A.China will always boast a very impressive price advantage around the globe
B.Foxconn's rising wage is just a one-sided case
C.Souring wages has improved a widespread impact on foreign companies
D.Foxconn is a manufacturer of great significance to China

单项选择题

Questions 102-106refer to the following passage.
Rising wages -- together with currency fluctuations and high fuel costs -- are eating away the once-formidable"China price" advantage, prompting thousands of factory owners to flee the Pearl River Delta. Much has been written about the more than doubling of wages at the Shenzhen factory of Foxconn, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, which produces Apple iPhones and iPads and employs 920,000 people in China alone. "One can talk about a world pre-and post-Foxconn," says Victor Fung, chairman of Li & Fung, the world's biggest sourcing company and a supplier of Wal-Mart. "Foxconn is as important as that."
Foxconn's wage increases are only the most dramatic. Our analysis suggests that, since February, minimum wages have climbed more than 20 percent in 20 Chinese regions and up to 30percent in some, including Sichuan. At a Guangdong Province factory supplying Honda, wages have risen an astonishing 47 percent. All this is bad news for companies operating in the world's manufacturing hub, and chief executives should assume that double-digit annual rises -- if not on the scale witnessed this year -- are here to stay.
Looked at another way, however, wage inflation provides companies with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink radically the way they approach global production -- and they should do so sooner rather than later.
Why the urgency? After all, wage hikes in China are nothing new. Since 1990, they have risen by an average of 13 percent a year in U.S. dollar terms and 19 percent annually in the past five years.
There are two big reasons and the situation is different now. The first has to do with productivity. Over the past 20 years, productivity increases have broadly matched wage increase,negating their impact. The pay rises came from a very low base, so while average wages grew 19 percent a year from 2005 to 2010, this amounted to only ~260 a month per employee, a sum that could be offset by more efficient production or switching to cheaper sources zf parts and materials.
If labor costs continue, however, to increase at 19 percent a year for another five years,monthly wages would grew ~623 per month, according to BCG estimates. Such an increase would ripple through the economy in the form of higher prices for components, business services, cargo-handling and office staff.
The second reason relates to societal change. Until now, it has been easy to lure a seemingly unlimited number of young, low-wage workers to the richer coastal regions and house them cheaply in dormitories until they saved enough to return home to their families in the interior provinces. In the future, though, young workers will be harder to recruit. This is partly because there will be few-er of them: Largely because of the country's one-child policy, the number of Chinese aged 15 to 29 will start declining in 2011. Moreover, with living standards rising across China, fewer of today's rural youth will want to go to coastal regions to toil for 60 hours a week on an assembly line and live in a cramped dormitory.
So what can CEOs do in this fast-changing environment? An instinctive reaction is to search for cheaper labor elsewhere. But this is short-sighted and would provide -- at best -- a short-term fix. Another option is to stay in China and try to squeeze out greater productivity gains.

In Paragraph 5, the author discusses that()

A.if labor costs continue to grow, it would ripple through the economy
B.average wages grow 19 percent from 2005 to 2010
C.foreign enterprises should switch their manufacturing to cheaper sources
D.the wage rises over the past 2 decades could be offset by rising production

单项选择题

Questions 102-106refer to the following passage.
Rising wages -- together with currency fluctuations and high fuel costs -- are eating away the once-formidable"China price" advantage, prompting thousands of factory owners to flee the Pearl River Delta. Much has been written about the more than doubling of wages at the Shenzhen factory of Foxconn, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, which produces Apple iPhones and iPads and employs 920,000 people in China alone. "One can talk about a world pre-and post-Foxconn," says Victor Fung, chairman of Li & Fung, the world's biggest sourcing company and a supplier of Wal-Mart. "Foxconn is as important as that."
Foxconn's wage increases are only the most dramatic. Our analysis suggests that, since February, minimum wages have climbed more than 20 percent in 20 Chinese regions and up to 30percent in some, including Sichuan. At a Guangdong Province factory supplying Honda, wages have risen an astonishing 47 percent. All this is bad news for companies operating in the world's manufacturing hub, and chief executives should assume that double-digit annual rises -- if not on the scale witnessed this year -- are here to stay.
Looked at another way, however, wage inflation provides companies with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink radically the way they approach global production -- and they should do so sooner rather than later.
Why the urgency? After all, wage hikes in China are nothing new. Since 1990, they have risen by an average of 13 percent a year in U.S. dollar terms and 19 percent annually in the past five years.
There are two big reasons and the situation is different now. The first has to do with productivity. Over the past 20 years, productivity increases have broadly matched wage increase,negating their impact. The pay rises came from a very low base, so while average wages grew 19 percent a year from 2005 to 2010, this amounted to only ~260 a month per employee, a sum that could be offset by more efficient production or switching to cheaper sources zf parts and materials.
If labor costs continue, however, to increase at 19 percent a year for another five years,monthly wages would grew ~623 per month, according to BCG estimates. Such an increase would ripple through the economy in the form of higher prices for components, business services, cargo-handling and office staff.
The second reason relates to societal change. Until now, it has been easy to lure a seemingly unlimited number of young, low-wage workers to the richer coastal regions and house them cheaply in dormitories until they saved enough to return home to their families in the interior provinces. In the future, though, young workers will be harder to recruit. This is partly because there will be few-er of them: Largely because of the country's one-child policy, the number of Chinese aged 15 to 29 will start declining in 2011. Moreover, with living standards rising across China, fewer of today's rural youth will want to go to coastal regions to toil for 60 hours a week on an assembly line and live in a cramped dormitory.
So what can CEOs do in this fast-changing environment? An instinctive reaction is to search for cheaper labor elsewhere. But this is short-sighted and would provide -- at best -- a short-term fix. Another option is to stay in China and try to squeeze out greater productivity gains.

The reasons why young worker will be harder to recruit exclude()

A.China's one-child policy
B.the fact that fewer rural youth want to go to coastal cities
C.surging living standards
D.the declining number of China's youth

单项选择题

Questions 102-106refer to the following passage.
Rising wages -- together with currency fluctuations and high fuel costs -- are eating away the once-formidable"China price" advantage, prompting thousands of factory owners to flee the Pearl River Delta. Much has been written about the more than doubling of wages at the Shenzhen factory of Foxconn, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, which produces Apple iPhones and iPads and employs 920,000 people in China alone. "One can talk about a world pre-and post-Foxconn," says Victor Fung, chairman of Li & Fung, the world's biggest sourcing company and a supplier of Wal-Mart. "Foxconn is as important as that."
Foxconn's wage increases are only the most dramatic. Our analysis suggests that, since February, minimum wages have climbed more than 20 percent in 20 Chinese regions and up to 30percent in some, including Sichuan. At a Guangdong Province factory supplying Honda, wages have risen an astonishing 47 percent. All this is bad news for companies operating in the world's manufacturing hub, and chief executives should assume that double-digit annual rises -- if not on the scale witnessed this year -- are here to stay.
Looked at another way, however, wage inflation provides companies with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink radically the way they approach global production -- and they should do so sooner rather than later.
Why the urgency? After all, wage hikes in China are nothing new. Since 1990, they have risen by an average of 13 percent a year in U.S. dollar terms and 19 percent annually in the past five years.
There are two big reasons and the situation is different now. The first has to do with productivity. Over the past 20 years, productivity increases have broadly matched wage increase,negating their impact. The pay rises came from a very low base, so while average wages grew 19 percent a year from 2005 to 2010, this amounted to only ~260 a month per employee, a sum that could be offset by more efficient production or switching to cheaper sources zf parts and materials.
If labor costs continue, however, to increase at 19 percent a year for another five years,monthly wages would grew ~623 per month, according to BCG estimates. Such an increase would ripple through the economy in the form of higher prices for components, business services, cargo-handling and office staff.
The second reason relates to societal change. Until now, it has been easy to lure a seemingly unlimited number of young, low-wage workers to the richer coastal regions and house them cheaply in dormitories until they saved enough to return home to their families in the interior provinces. In the future, though, young workers will be harder to recruit. This is partly because there will be few-er of them: Largely because of the country's one-child policy, the number of Chinese aged 15 to 29 will start declining in 2011. Moreover, with living standards rising across China, fewer of today's rural youth will want to go to coastal regions to toil for 60 hours a week on an assembly line and live in a cramped dormitory.
So what can CEOs do in this fast-changing environment? An instinctive reaction is to search for cheaper labor elsewhere. But this is short-sighted and would provide -- at best -- a short-term fix. Another option is to stay in China and try to squeeze out greater productivity gains.

On which of the following would the author most probably agree()

A.Foreign investors should move their manufacturing capability closer to the consumer
B.China's wage inflation will wreak a political havoc in the future
C.Foreign investors should flee to neighboring countries, such as Vietnam
D.There's plenty of room to improve efficiency at Chinese plants

单项选择题

Questions 102-106refer to the following passage.
Rising wages -- together with currency fluctuations and high fuel costs -- are eating away the once-formidable"China price" advantage, prompting thousands of factory owners to flee the Pearl River Delta. Much has been written about the more than doubling of wages at the Shenzhen factory of Foxconn, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, which produces Apple iPhones and iPads and employs 920,000 people in China alone. "One can talk about a world pre-and post-Foxconn," says Victor Fung, chairman of Li & Fung, the world's biggest sourcing company and a supplier of Wal-Mart. "Foxconn is as important as that."
Foxconn's wage increases are only the most dramatic. Our analysis suggests that, since February, minimum wages have climbed more than 20 percent in 20 Chinese regions and up to 30percent in some, including Sichuan. At a Guangdong Province factory supplying Honda, wages have risen an astonishing 47 percent. All this is bad news for companies operating in the world's manufacturing hub, and chief executives should assume that double-digit annual rises -- if not on the scale witnessed this year -- are here to stay.
Looked at another way, however, wage inflation provides companies with a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rethink radically the way they approach global production -- and they should do so sooner rather than later.
Why the urgency? After all, wage hikes in China are nothing new. Since 1990, they have risen by an average of 13 percent a year in U.S. dollar terms and 19 percent annually in the past five years.
There are two big reasons and the situation is different now. The first has to do with productivity. Over the past 20 years, productivity increases have broadly matched wage increase,negating their impact. The pay rises came from a very low base, so while average wages grew 19 percent a year from 2005 to 2010, this amounted to only ~260 a month per employee, a sum that could be offset by more efficient production or switching to cheaper sources zf parts and materials.
If labor costs continue, however, to increase at 19 percent a year for another five years,monthly wages would grew ~623 per month, according to BCG estimates. Such an increase would ripple through the economy in the form of higher prices for components, business services, cargo-handling and office staff.
The second reason relates to societal change. Until now, it has been easy to lure a seemingly unlimited number of young, low-wage workers to the richer coastal regions and house them cheaply in dormitories until they saved enough to return home to their families in the interior provinces. In the future, though, young workers will be harder to recruit. This is partly because there will be few-er of them: Largely because of the country's one-child policy, the number of Chinese aged 15 to 29 will start declining in 2011. Moreover, with living standards rising across China, fewer of today's rural youth will want to go to coastal regions to toil for 60 hours a week on an assembly line and live in a cramped dormitory.
So what can CEOs do in this fast-changing environment? An instinctive reaction is to search for cheaper labor elsewhere. But this is short-sighted and would provide -- at best -- a short-term fix. Another option is to stay in China and try to squeeze out greater productivity gains.

Which of the following would be the best title for text()

A.Rising Cost, A Pain in the Neck
B.The Irreversible Wage inflation
C.To Rethink Global Production Plans
D.As Wages Rise, Time to Leave China?

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