Unit 1 money matters. Warming up. Conversational formulae box1. Giving an opinion. Topical vocabulary 1. 2. What do we do with money? Continue the list
Стр 1 из 5Следующая ⇒ The curious mind embraces science; the gifted and sensitive, the arts; the practical, business; the leftover becomes an economist. [ NASSIM Taleb's book of aphorisms is now out with the the erudite title " The Bed of Procrustes". ] UNIT 1 MONEY MATTERS
WARMING UP 1. Support or refute the following ideas, using conversational formulae box below:
Conversational formulae box1
TOPICAL VOCABULARY 1 1. Comment on the points of difference or similarity between the words in each line. Use them in your own contexts to illustrate the difference in usage: money – cash – funds – finance – change earnings – revenues – income – profit remuneration – salary – wage bonus – interest – yield – commission payment – pay – charge – fee – fare
2. What do we do with money? Continue the list We earn it, we spend it…
READING 1. JIG SAW READING Scan the texts below. Be ready to exchange the information with your partner on the following points: -the age of the currency; -the number of countries which have adopted it as a means of payment; -advantages and disadvantages of this currency for strategic investors and the general public; -currency stability/currency depreciation and the influence of these on the economy Text A The euro Feb 18th 2009 The euro launched as an electronic currency in January 1999; cash appeared three years later. Fifteen of the European Union's 27 member states have so far adopted the currency and more would like to do so. The euro is considered an attractive shelter during times of economic turmoil. But some countries have rejected it and Britain has never looked likely to join. The euro's adoption is meant to complete the European single market, facilitating cross-border mergers and price transparency while eliminating exchange-rate risk. But it invites “free-rider” problems, by spreading risk among the countries that use it, while doing little to synchronise the euro zone’s economies. Having fallen dramatically after its launch, the euro began recovering against the dollar in mid-2001, overtaking it in December2004 and continuing to rise over the next few years (to the chagrin of European exporters) until slipping in August 2008. Whenever the EU stumbles politically, critics of the euro tend to raise doubts about its utility—most of them misplaced. By the tenth anniversary of its launch however, the spectre of a member's default—or some lesser drama—began to seem real. Text B The dollar Oct 8th 2008 The American dollar's value has global repercussions. Sovereign debt is usually denominated in dollars, and a strong dollar can feed other countries' inflation by making dollar-priced imports expensive (a weak buck has the opposite effect). The dollar is also the world's main reserve currency, although that status may be in jeopardy due to America's profligacy. During the 1990s, demand for American assets helped keep the dollar strong. It remained so during America's recession—Japan's sickness kept the yen down, and the euro remained curiously weak. The dollar was probably overvalued then (as The Economist's Big Mac Index would have told you), and in early 2002 began to fall gradually, and then more steeply, helped along by America's yawning current-account and budget deficits. Despite a rebound in 2005, the dollar resumed its decline, as gloomy economic news piled up. Some have puzzled over its resilience, in the face of massive financial crisis.
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