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14:57:20 8.19 2 卖盘
14:57:15 8.19 11 -
14:57:10 8.18 2554 卖盘
14:57:05 8.20 1022 买盘
很急迫的卖出
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一买就跌;
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ZGYZ
4:46:35 5.49 12212 卖盘
14:46:25 5.50 - -
14:46:30 5.50 10010 买盘
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卖出去的股票,再涨;
留下的股票,再跌;
分批买入,分批卖出;
有机会就T+0
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【 原创: 五道口肄业 只看楼主(-1) 2010-02-11 00:23 淘股论坛 浏览/回复273/4 复制分享 】
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不看好。不是乐观,也不是谨慎乐观,是彻彻底底的完全不看好。
结构性机会?笑话,A股有什么结构呀,还不是一窝蜂的上上下下。当然,我也不能把话说得太过了,万一到明年有人挖坟怎么办呢?
所以科学的说法是99%的个股将淹没于大盘浩瀚的下跌浪中。
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Economic Development and Population Growth
10. Rapid population growth creates a severe drag on rates of economic development otherwise attainable,
sometimes to the point of preventing any increase in per capita incomes.
In addition to the overall impact on per capita incomes, rapid population growth seriously affects a vast range of other aspects of the quality of life important to social and economic progress in the LDCs.
11. Adverse economic factors which generally result from rapid population growth include:
[list] [*]reduced family savings and domestic investment; [*]increased need for large amounts of foreign exchange for food imports; [*]intensification of severe unemployment and underemployment; [*]the need for large expenditures for services such as dependency support, education, and health which would be used for more productive investment; [*]the concentration of developmental resources on increasing food production to ensure survival for a larger population, rather than on improving living conditions for smaller total numbers. [/list] 12. While GNP increased per annum at an average rate of 5 percent in LDCs over the last decade,
the population increase of 2.5 percent reduced the average annual per capita growth rate to only 2.5 percent.
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Minerals and Fuel
8. Rapid population growth is not in itself a major factor in pressure on depletable resources
(fossil fuels and other minerals), since demand for them depends more on levels of industrial output than on numbers of people.
On the other hand, the world is increasingly dependent on mineral supplies from developing countries,
and if rapid population frustrates their prospects for economic development and social progress,
the resulting instability may undermine the conditions for expanded output and sustained flows of such resources.
9. There will be serious problems for some of the poorest LDCs with rapid population growth.
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Adequacy of World Food Supplies
5. Growing populations will have a serious impact on the need for food especially in the poorest,
fastest growing LDCs.
6. The most serious consequence for the short and middle term is the possibility of massive famines in certain parts of the world,
especially the poorest regions.
7. In addition, in some overpopulated regions,
rapid population growth presses on a fragile environment in ways
that threaten longer-term food production:
through cultivation of marginal lands,
overgrazing, desertification, deforestation, and soil erosion,
with consequent destruction of land and pollution of water,
rapid siltation of reservoirs, and impairment of inland and coastal fisheries.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
World Demographic Trends 1. World Population growth since World War II
is quantitatively and qualitatively different from any previous epoch in human history.
2. The second new feature of population trends
is the sharp differentiation between rich and poor countries.
3. Because of the momentum of population
dynamics, reductions in birth rates affect total numbers only slowly.
4. U.N. estimates use the 3.6 billion
population of 1970 as a base (there are nearly 4 billion now) and project
from about 6 billion to 8 billion people for the year 2000 with the U.S.
medium estimate at 6.4 billion.
Adequacy of World Food Supplies
0
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
World Demographic Trends 1. World Population growth since World War II is quantitatively and qualitatively different from any previous epoch in human history.
2. The second new feature of population trends is the sharp differentiation between rich and poor countries.
3. Because of the momentum of population dynamics, reductions in birth rates affect total numbers only slowly.
4. U.N. estimates use the 3.6 billion population of 1970 as a base (there are nearly 4 billion now) and project from about 6 billion to 8 billion people for the year 2000 with the U.S. medium estimate at 6.4 billion.
Adequacy of World Food Supplies