甲股份有限公司(本题下称“甲公司”)为上市公司,2×13年至2×15年关于企业合并、长期股权投资有关资料如下: (1)2×13年1月20日,甲公司与乙公司签订购买乙公司持有的丙公司(非上市公司)60%股权的合同。合同规定:以丙公司2×13年5月30日评估的可辨认净资产价值为基础,协商确定对丙公司60%股权的购买价格;合同经双方股东大会批准后生效。购买丙公司60%股权时,甲公司与乙公司不存在关联方关系。 (2)购买丙公司60%股权的合同执行情况如下: ①2×13年3月15日,甲公司和乙公司分别召开股东大会,批准通过了该购买股权的合同。 ②以丙公司2×13年5月30日净资产评估值为基础,经调整后丙公司2×13年6月30日的资产负债表中部分项目资料如下: 单位:万元项目账面价值公允价值固定资产24004800无形资产16002400股东权益930012500 上表中固定资产为一栋办公楼,该办公楼自2×13年6月30日起剩余使用年限为20年、预计净残值为零,采用年限平均法计提折旧;上表中无形资产为一项土地使用权,预计该土地使用权自2×13年6月30日起剩余使用年限为10年、净残值为零,采用直线法摊销。假定该办公楼和土地使用权均为管理部门使用。 除上表所列项目外,丙公司各项可辨认资产、负债的公允价值与其账面价值相同。 ③经协商,双方确定丙公司60%股权的价格为7200万元,甲公司以一项固定资产和一项土地使用权作为对价。甲公司作为对价的固定资产2×13年6月30日的账面原价为2800万元,累计折旧为600万元,计提的固定资产减值准备为200万元,公允价值为4000万元;作为对价的土地使用权2×13年6月30日的账面原价为2600万元,累计摊销为400万元,计提的无形资产减值准备为200万元,公允价值为3200万元。 2×13年6月30日,甲公司以银行存款支付购买股权过程中发生的评估费用120万元、咨询费用80万元。 ④甲公司和乙公司均于2×13年6月30日办理完毕上述相关资产的产权转让手续。甲公司于2×13年6月30日对丙公司董事会进行改组,甲公司能够有权力主导丙公司的相关活动并获得可变回报。 (3)丙公司2×13年及2×14年实现损益等有关情况如下: ①2×13年度丙公司实现净利润1000万元(假定有关收入、费用在年度中间均匀发生),当年提取盈余公积100万元,未对外分配现金股利。 ②2×14年度丙公司实现净利润1500万元,当年提取盈余公积150万元,未对外分配现金股利。 ③2×13年7月1日至2×14年12月31日,丙公司除实现净利润外,未发生其他引起股东权益变动的交易和事项。 (4)2×15年1月2日,甲公司以2950万元的价格出售丙公司20%的股权。当日丙公司可辨认净资产公允价值总额为13500万元。甲公司于当日收到购买方通过银行转账支付的价款,并办理完毕股权转让手续。 甲公司在出售该部分股权后,持有丙公司的股权比例降至40%,仍能够对丙公司实施重大影响,但不再拥有对丙公司的控制权。 2×15年度丙公司实现净利润600万元,当年提取盈余公积60万元,未对外分配现金股利。丙公司因当年购入的可供出售金融资产公允价值上升确认其他综合收益200万元。 (5)其他有关资料: ①不考虑所得税及其他税费因素的影响; ②甲公司按照净利润的10%提取盈余公积。 要求: 根据资料(1)和(2),计算甲公司对丙公司长期股权投资的入账价值并编制相关会计分录。
In 1999, the price of oil hovered around $ 16 a barrel. By 2008, it had【C1】______the $ 100 a barrel mark. The reasons for the surge【C2】______from the dramatic growth of the economies of China and India to widespread【C3】______in oil-producing regions, including Iraq and Nigeria"s delta region. Triple-digit oil prices have【C4】______the economic and political map of the world, 【C5】______some old notions of power. Oil-rich nations are enjoying historic gains and opportunities, 【C6】______major importers — including China and India, home to a third of the world"s population —【C7】______rising economic and social costs. Managing this new order is fast becoming a central【C8】______of global politics. Countries that need oil are clawing at each other to【C9】______scarce supplies, and are willing to deal with any government, 【C10】______how unpleasant, to do it. In many poor nations with oil, the profits are being, lost to corruption, 【C11】______these countries of their best hope for development. And oil is fueling enormous investment funds run by foreign governments, 【C12】______some in the west see as a new threat. Countries like Russia, Venezuela and Iran are well supplied with rising oil【C13】______a change reflected in newly aggressive foreign policies. But some unexpected countries are reaping benefits, 【C14】______costs, from higher prices. Consider Germany. 【C15】______it imports virtually all its oil, it has prospered from extensive trade with a booming Russia and the Middle East. German exports to Russia【C16】______128 percent from 2001 to 2006. In the United States, as already high gas prices rose【C17】______higher in the spring of 2008, the issue cropped up in the presidential campaign, with Senators McCain and Obama【C18】______for a federal gas tax holiday during the peak summer driving months. And driving habits began to【C19】______as sales of small cars jumped and mass transport systems【C20】______the country reported a sharp increase in riders. 【C4】
A. drawn
B. redrawn
C. retained
D. reviewed
The question of where insights come from has become a hot topic in neuroscience, despite the fact that they are not easy to induce experimentally in a laboratory. Dr. Bhattacharya and Dr. Sheth have taken a creative approach. They have selected some brain-teasing but practical problems in the hope that these would get closer to mimicking real insight. To qualify, a puzzle had to be simple, not too widely known and without a methodical solution. The researchers then asked 18 young adults to try to solve these problems while their brainwaves were monitored using an electroencephalograph (EEG). A typical brain-teaser went like this. There are three light switches on the ground-floor wall of a three-storey house. Two of the switches do nothing, but one of them controls a bulb on the second floor. When you begin, the bulb is off. You can only make one visit to the second floor. How do you work out which switch is the one that controls the light This problem, or one equivalent to it, was presented on a computer screen to a volunteer when that volunteer pressed a button. The electrical activity of the volunteer"s brain (his brainwave pattern) was recorded by the EEG from the button"s press. Each volunteer was given 30 seconds to read the puzzle and another 60 to 90 seconds to solve it. Some people worked it out; others did not. The significant point, though, was that the EEG predicted who would fall where. Those volunteers who went on to have an insight (in this case that on their one and only visit to the second floor they could use not just the light but the heat produced by a bulb as evidence of an active switch) had had different brainwave activity from those who never got it. In the right frontal cortex, a part of the brain associated with shifting mental states, there was an increase in high-frequency gamma waves (those with 47~48 cycles a second). Moreover, the difference was noticeable up to eight seconds before the volunteer realised he had found the solution. Dr. Sheth thinks this may be capturing the "transformational thought" in action, before the brain"s "owner" is consciously aware of it. This finding poses fascinating questions about how the brain really works. Conscious thought, it seems, does not solve problems. Instead, unconscious processing happens in the background and only delivers the answer to consciousness once it has been arrived at. Food for further thought, indeed. How do brains work according to the text
A. Brains decide according to the consciousness.
Brains decide according to the subconsciousness.
C. Brains decide before their owners know about it.
D. Brains decide after their owners know about it.