Questão
Universidade de São Paulo - USP - FUVEST
2006
1ª Fase
VER HISTÓRICO DE RESPOSTAS
CHINA-has-begun-to1531dd5963c
“CHINA has begun to enter the age of mass car consumption. This is a great and historic advance.” So proclaimed the state-run news agency, Xinhua, last year. Environmentalists may feel a twinge of fear at this burgeoning romance with motoring. But a rapid social and economic transformation is under way in urban China, and the car is steering it.

In 2002 demand for cars in China soared by 56%, far more than even the rosiest projections. The next year growth quickened to 75%, before slowing in 2004 (when the government tightened rules on credit for car purchases) to around 15%. But in a sluggish global market, China’s demand remains mesmerising. Few expect this year’s growth to dip below 10%. As long as the economy goes on galloping at its current high-singledigit clip, many expect car sales to increase by 10-20% annually for several years to come.

The Economist June 4th 2005 

According to the passage, Xinhua
A
had proclaimed that China’s car industry would boom in 2004. 
B
played an important role in China’s social and economic transformation. 
C
reported, with pride, in 2004, the beginning of a new era for China. 
D
considers the new bank lending rules to be responsible for China’s mass car consumption.
E
pointed out, in 2004, that China’s car industry would grow beyond expectations in the short run.