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A BABYLONIAN lamp, by modern standards, shed little light on its surroundings. Nearly 4000 years later it sheds far more on an issue of great interest: the pace of mankind's material progress. In a new paper, William Nordhaus of Yale University starts by asking what may seem a dull question: do statisticians measure prices accurately? To find out, he studies the economic history of light from Neolithic times to the present. His answer and its implications are startling. Traditional estimates have failed to track the fall in the price of light, especially over the past 200 years. As a result, they overstate today's price, relative to the price in 1800, not by a few percentage points, nor even by a factor of one or two, but by a factor of about 1000. Even by the standards of economics, that is a large error. The implications are of corresponding size. If the prices of other things are measured as badly as the price of light, it follows that traditional estimates of economic growth are way off the mark. Economists are familiar with the difficulty of measuring changes in prices over time. It seems easy to measure the price of, say, a ball-point pen. But suppose that. a new version comes along that costs twice as much and lasts four times as long. If it catches on, the price of a pen has doubled—but the price of pen-services, as it were, has halved. This second price is the one that should be used to calculate the change in living standards. However, it is often difficult to observe. You need to know not just the change in the prices of the goods but also the change in the services that the goods provide. Measuring that is especially hard when the range of services itself changes over time. (Compare the communication-services provided by a modern telephone with those of one from the 1950s, for instance.) Mr. Nordhaus points out that light has a useful property in this respect. Its service— illumination—does not vary. Babylonians used lamps for much the same reason that modern Americans use incandescent bulbs. With diligence and great ingenuity, Mr. Nordhaus has collected data on the light-services provided down the ages by: burning sticks; fat-and-oil- burning lamps; candles (tallow, sperm-oil, etc); gas lights (various); kerosene lamps; and the many different kinds of electric light. (The unit of measurement is the lumen; a wax candle emits about 13 lumens, a modern 100-watt bulb on 110 bolts about 1,200.) Mr. Nordhaus has also collected data on the prices of these sources of light: the price of a candle, the price of a given quantity of gas or electricity, and so on. Putting the two together yields a true measure for the price of light. In nominal terms, the price of 1,000 lumen-hours has fallen from about 40 cents in 1800 to about one-tenth of a cent today. The black line in the chart plots this series as an index. (The sharp fall at the end of the line marks the introduction of the compact fluorescent bulb.) In real terms, of course, the fall is even sharper: 40 cents in 1800 is worth more than $4 in today's money. Compare this with a price series calculated using the conventional methods of official statistics—that is, by looking at the prices of goods that provide light rather than at the price of light itself. Mr. Nordhaus stitches together such a series from a variety of official sources. According to this measure, the price of light has fallen in real terms since 1800, but has gone up by 180% in nominal terms (as shown by the white line in the chart). In other words, conventional estimates would put the price of light in 1800 at about four-hundredths of a cent per 1,000 lumen-hour. Mr. Nordhaus' first series shows that the price of light in 1800 was about 1,000 times dearer than that. This staggering difference is par@ an illustration of the effect of compound interest. It represents a drift of roughly 3.6% a year between the official and the t
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【单选题】由传统电子商务运营商,利用自身在电子商务领域的运营优势发展而来,主要应用内容包括搜索、比价、商品购买等,经营上与传统电子商务类似,支持货到付款,该模式的应用对象既可以是企业组织,也可以是自然个体的电子商务应用模式为( )
A.
“通道+平台”模式
B.
“品牌+运营”模式
C.
“联盟+平台”模式
D.
“品牌+平台”模式
【单选题】配戴圆柱形透镜可矫正
A.
散光眼
B.
近视眼
C.
远视眼
D.
老花眼
E.
青光眼
【单选题】促进个人与社会和谐应该( )。
A.
正确处理竞争与合作的关系
B.
正确认识个体性与社会性的统一关系
C.
强大的国防
D.
强大的改革精神
【多选题】马克思说:“人是最名副其实的政治动物,不仅是一种合群的动物,而且是只有在社会中才能独立的动物。”在促进个人与社会和谐时应该( )
A.
正确认识个体性与社会性的统一关系
B.
正确认识个人需要与社会需要的统一关系
C.
正确认识个人利益与社会利益的统一关系
D.
正确认识享受个人权利与承担社会责任的统一关系
【简答题】配戴圆柱形透镜可矫正A. 散光眼 B、近视眼 C、远视眼 D、老花眼 E、青光眼
【多选题】家庭是社会的基本细胞,是人生的第一所学校,每个人都应该( ),促进家庭生活的和谐与幸福。
A.
自觉遵守家庭美德
B.
认识家庭美德的重要性
C.
遵守婚姻家庭法律规范
D.
重视家庭、营造良好家风
【简答题】我某外贸公司与荷兰进口商签订一份皮手套合同,价格为CIF鹿特丹,向中国人民保险公司投保一切险。生产厂家在生产的最后一道工序将手套的湿度降低到了最低程度,然后用牛皮纸包好装入双层瓦楞纸箱,再装入20英尺集装箱,货物到达鹿特丹后,检验结果表明,全部货物湿、霉、沾污、变色,损失价值达8万美元。据分析,该批货物的出口地无异常热,进口地鹿特丹无异常冷,运输途中无异常,运输完全属于正常运输。你认为出口商应如何...
【简答题】我某外贸公司与荷兰进口商签订一份皮手套合同,价格为CIF鹿特丹,向中国人民保险公司投保一切险。生产厂家在生产的最后一道工序将手套的湿度降低到了最低程度,然后用牛皮纸包好装入双层瓦楞纸箱,再装入20英尺集装箱,货物到达鹿特丹后,检验结果表明,全部货物湿、霉、沾污、变色,损失价值达8万美元。据分析,该批货物的出口地无异常热,进口地鹿特丹无异常冷,运输途中无异常,运输完全属于正常运输。进口商对受损货物是...
【单选题】促进个人与社会和谐应该()
A.
正确处理竞争与合作的关系
B.
正确认识个体性与社会性的统一关系
C.
正确认识竞争
D.
正确认识合作
【单选题】教师在课堂上向学生做示范性试验来说明和印证所传授的知识,这种方法是指( )。
A.
实验法
B.
演示法
C.
参观法
D.
实践活动法
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