2010考研英语阅读理解文章第四篇来源出处
(2010-01-14 09:58:45)
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2010考研英语阅读理解第四篇来源出处教育 |
分类: 【万学海文公共课】 |
2010年考研英语阅读理解第四篇文章属于经济类,节选于09年4月份的《经济学人》(The Economist),文章的结构形式和我们以前考过的结构类型相似。
原文如下(加粗部分为真题节选部分):
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/13476293?f=related
Messenger, Shot
Accounting rules are under attack. Standard-setters should
defend them. Politicians and banks should back off.
Economist Staff - The
Economist
April 10, 2009
In public, bankers have been blaming themselves for their
troubles. Behind the scenes, they have been taking aim at someone
else: the accounting standard-setters. Their rules, moan the banks,
have forced them to report enormous losses, and it's just not fair.
These rules say they must value some assets at the price a third
party would pay, not the price managers and regulators would like
them to fetch. Unfortunately, banks' lobbying now seems to be
working. The details may be arcane, but the independence of
standard-setters, essential to the proper functioning of capital
markets, is being compromised. And, unless banks carry toxic assets
at prices that attract buyers, reviving the banking system will be
difficult.
On April 2nd, after a bruising encounter with Congress,
America's Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) rushed
through rule changes. These gave banks more freedom to use models
to value illiquid assets and more flexibility in recognising losses
on long-term assets in their income statements. Bob Herz, the
FASB's chairman, decried those who "impugn our motives". Yet bank
shares rose and the changes enhance what one lobbying group
politely calls "the use of judgment by management".
European ministers instantly demanded that the International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB) do likewise. The IASB says it
does not want to be "piecemeal", but the pressure to fold when it
completes its overhaul of rules later this year is strong. On April
1st Charlie McCreevy, a European commissioner, warned the IASB that
it did "not live in a political vacuum" but "in the real world" and
that Europe could yet develop different rules.
It was banks that were on the wrong planet, with accounts that
vastly overvalued assets. Today they argue that market prices
overstate losses, because they largely reflect the temporary
illiquidity of markets, not the likely extent of bad debts. The
truth will not be known for years. But banks' shares trade below
their book value, suggesting that investors are sceptical. And dead
markets partly reflect the paralysis of banks which will not sell
assets for fear of booking losses, yet are reluctant to buy all
those supposed bargains.
To get the system working again, losses must be recognised and
dealt with. Japan's procrastination prolonged its crisis. America's
new plan to buy up toxic assets will not work unless banks mark
assets to levels which buyers find attractive. Successful markets
require independent and even combative standard-setters. The FASB
and IASB have been exactly that, cleaning up rules on stock options
and pensions, for example, against hostility from special
interests. But by appeasing critics now they are inviting pressure
to make more concessions.
To reveal, but not to
regulate
Standard-setters should defuse the
argument by making clear that their job is not to regulate banks
but to force them to reveal information. The banks, their
capital-adequacy regulators and politicians seem to dream of a
single, grown-up version of the truth, which enhances financial
stability. Investors and accountants, however, think all valuations
are subjective, doubt managers' motives and judge that market
prices are the least-bad option. They are right. A bank's solvency
is a matter of judgment for its regulators and for investors, not
whatever a piece of paper signed by its auditors says it is.
Accounts can inform that decision, but not make it.
Banks' regulators have to take responsibility. If they want to
remove the mechanical link between drops in market prices and
capital shortfalls at banks, they should take the accounts that
standard-setters create for investors and adjust them when they
calculate capital. They already do this to some degree. But the
banks' campaign to change the rules is making inevitable a split
between two sets of accounts, one for regulators and another for
investors. The FASB and IASB can help regulators to create whatever
balance-sheet they want. But in doing so they must not compromise
their duty to investors.