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With U.S. companies sitting on an estimated $1.8 trillion in cash, it raises the question: Why aren’t they deploying more of their hoard to expand their businesses Or one might channel John Maynard Keynes to ask: Where have the "animal spirits" goneAlthough capital spending in the U.S. is up 12 percent since the lows of early 2009, it’s still running $88 billion below the peak of $1.34 trillion reached in the first quarter of 2008, says Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist atDeutscheBank. He doesn’t expect capital spending to catch up to that peak level and officially start to expand until the second quarter of 2011. (LaVorgna’s definition of capital spending includes physical equipment and software, but not structures such as new stores or manufacturing plants. Spending on structures is about 2 percent of gross domestic product, one-third the size of capital sending’s contribution to GDP, he says.)

"The trend and momentum have definitely turned and it’s just a matter of time before you see other companies give way to capital spending, and eventually that will result in hiring," says LaVorgn
A、But with spending running $88 billion below peak, he says employment "should be farther along than it is."Companies that have built up a lot of cash are starting to take some chances such as expanding into new markets, which requires hiring new workers, says JohnChallenger, chief executive officer ofChallenger, Gray &Christmas, an employment consulting firm. U.S. companies have announced the hiring of 118,209 new employees throughAugust, according to data collected by the firm.
So who’s stepping up to the plate Some companies refuse to be cowed and are taking big, if calculated, chances, including ambitious capital projects, hiring new workers, and expanded investment in research and development, according to growth-oriented mutual fund managers contacted byBusinessweek.com. If there’s a common denominator, it’s a perceived opportunity and confidence in sustainable demand, whether due to new trends in technology or to new markets that need certain products. Other names came from a list of the top-hiring U.S. companies through July 2010 compiled byChallenger, Gray &Christmas.
"We don’t spend capital unless we have a new contract to supply oxygen, nitrogen, or hydrogen to our customers," says James Sawyer, Praxair’s chief financial officer. "Those are 15-year contracts with minimal take-or-pay clauses written into them, which ensure we will get a good return on our capital investment, regardless of how the rest of the economy is doing."
Some younger outfits with entrepreneurial managers who have lived through a few business cycles think their companies may be able to steal a march on competitors more reluctant to spend, saysAram Green, manager ofClearBridgeAdvisors SmallCap Growth FunD、"There’s clearly been a decision by management that ’This is not the time to take our foot off the accelerator. In fact, it’s time to push harder and further distance our product from the competition.’\
By citing the words ofAram Green, the author intends to show that______.
[A] younger managers prefer to have natural development of a company
[B] capital investment leads to an edge of a company over its competitors
[C] companies do not want to fall behind their competitors
[D] management wants to have new contracts more than they did before
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根据网考网移动考试中心的统计,该试题:

41%的考友选择了A选项

54%的考友选择了B选项

2%的考友选择了C选项

3%的考友选择了D选项

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