o小小di世界有最堅定de純真..o小小di夢想有最不變de永恆

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Originally posted by 香草玫瑰 at 2005-11-21 10:03 PM:
支持奶茶,明天好好反驳他们!

你教教我该怎么说啊!fear.gif
我还在想呢。。。
臭美精, 自恋狂!

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支持奶茶,明天好好反驳他们!

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我现在明白为什么开始老师好象不太想让我上这个课,原来是这个原因啊!
我当初报名上这个课,他说我只能在WARTELIST上,因为我不是经济系的学生,可是有的别的人,学的也不是经济,是其他专业,老师却让他们在正式的报名表上。后来报这个课的人数没满,他只能让我上。
哼!
臭美精, 自恋狂!

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Originally posted by 布哈林 at 2005-11-21 09:45 PM:
你们要争论什么啊

就是根据这篇文章讨论经济。这次主题是中国。
班上有些见识短浅的土鬼印度鬼,老标榜自己国家怎么样,我以前都不说话了。以前上课还说台湾是一个国家。我都没怎么争论。如果明天欺人太甚,我一定要反击的!
最烦就是那些以为懂一点点就乱指手画脚的家伙!
臭美精, 自恋狂!

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Work, work, work

But perhaps the biggest constraint, ironically, is also China's strength: its massive pool of low-cost labour. Arthur Kroeber, managing editor of china Economic Quarterly, argues that China has no real incentive to develop high-tech processes since, unlike Japan and South Korea, which were forced to grab markets from the West by sophisticated engineering and continuous process improvement, "China can compete fro the next 50 years on labour costs."
While politicians in Beijing shout about China's need to develop technology, the smartest Chinese firms are taking advantage of the labour supply and actually reducing their use of technology. A study by Boston Consulting Group shows that Chinese manufacturers were more productive and made more profits if they reduced the technology used in production and returned to more people-heavy processes. Vincet Lo, a Hong Kong entrepreneur who has invested in mainland cement plants, says that his factories, though primitive compared with the hugely automated ones built by France's Lafarge, have won local contracts precesely because they employ lots of people.
China should seize this advantage with both hands. Its labour will remain cheap for decades. Only labour-intensive industries can generate thte millions of new jobs needed each year to maintain the social stability sought by the leadership in Beijing . Meanwhile, China can gradually build up the educational, legal and financial infrastructure needed for faster technological development in the longer term.
臭美精, 自恋狂!

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It si the same story with semiconductors, and industry China has exlicitly targeted for development. The country is a voracious consumer of chips and an increasingly important location for siliconwafer plants, providing an extimated 19%  of world capacity this year. Yet its indigenous industry remains tiny and low-tech. Foreigners control most of the chip plants in China. These, in turn, concentrate on low-cvalue assembly and testing rather than design and manufacture.
While foreigners own virtually all of the intellectual property and most of the high-tech manufacturing capacity in China, piracy will remain an issue. Currently, General Motors, Toyota and Nissan are each embroiled in disputeds over stolen copyrights. But Peter Nolan, a China specialist at Britain's Cambridge University Judge Institute of Management, says that the counterfeit issue is overblown, arguing that foreign multinationals generally "have sophisticated ways to protect their hard-won technology". Mr Nolan argues that China's ability to upgrade technology through joint ventures has been exaggerated. So moves to tip the playing field by asserting Chinese standards are actually a sign of weakness rather than strength. (TNND,作者肯定妒忌中国!TNND,明天谁说中国坏话我跟谁急!!!)
Why has China been so slow to climb the technology ladder? History is one explanation. Under communism, most technological development was state-directed and a disaster. State-owned enterprises still grapple with legacies of poor management and a lack of sophisticated systems. Most privated companies are too samll yet to pour much money into innovation.
Meanwhile, global corporations are widening the gap. "The idea that you can naturally move from being a small, low-level producer to become a Merck or a Boeing is a fantasy," says Mr Nolan. A dysfunctional financial system is also to blame. Capital is routinely misallocated, venture funding still rudimentary, and mergers and stockmarket listings are at the government's discretion.
臭美精, 自恋狂!

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你们要争论什么啊

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