题干

阅读下列材料:

材料1:1920年底,列宁接见来访的农民时,针对当时苏俄实行的经济政策,一位农民说:“土地属于我们,面包却属于你们;水属于我们,鱼却属于你们;森林属于我们,木材却属于你们。”列宁亲自记录了他们的意见,坚定地说:“这种政策我们一定会改变!”

材料2:我们说俄国共产主义的“最初步骤……”把小农组织成各种协作社这一从小商品农业过渡到共产主义农业的办法,也刚刚开始实行。由国家组织产品分配来代替私营商业这件事,即由国家收购粮食供应城市、收购工业品供应农村这件事也是这样。

农民经济仍然是小商品生产。这是一个非常广泛和极其深厚的资本主义基础。在这个基础上,资本主义得以保留和复活起来,而且同共产主义进行极其残酷的斗争。这个斗争的形式,就是以投机倒把来反对国家收购粮食(以及其他农产品)。概括地说,就是反对由国家分配农产品。

——列宁《无产阶级专政时代的经济和政治》

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    However wealthy we may be, we can never find enough hours in the day to do everything we want. Economics deals with this problem through the concept of opportunity cost, which simply refers to whether someone's time or money could be better spent on something else.

    Every hour of our time has a value. For every hour we work at one job we could quite easily be doing another, or be sleeping or watching a film. Each of these options has a different opportunity cost—namely, what they cost us in missed opportunities.

    Say you intend to watch a football match but the tickets are expensive and it will take you a couple of hours to get to and from the stadium. Why not, you might reason, watch the game from home and use the leftover money and time to have dinner with friends? This—the alternative use of your cash and time—is the opportunity cost.

    For economists, every decision is made by knowledge of what one must forgo—in terms of money and enjoyment—in order to take it up. By knowing precisely what you are receiving and what you are missing out on, you ought to be able to make better-informed, more reasonable decisions. Consider that most famous economic rule of all: there's no such thing as a free lunch. Even if someone offers to take you out to lunch for free, the time you will spend in the restaurant still costs you something in terms of forgone opportunities.

    Some people find the idea of opportunity cost extremely discouraging: imagine spending your entire life calculating whether your time would be better spent elsewhere doing something more profitable or enjoyable. Yet, in a sense it's human nature to do precisely that—we assess the advantages and disadvantages of decisions all the time.

    In the business world, a popular phrase is “value for money.” People want their cash to go as far as possible. However, another is fast obtaining an advantage: “value for time.” The biggest restriction on our resources is the number of hours we can devote to something, so we look to maximize the return we get on our investment of time. By reading this passage you are giving over a bit of your time which could be spent doing other activities, such as sleeping and eating. In return, however, this passage will help you to think like an economist, closely considering the opportunity cost of each of your decisions.