class struggle – классовая борьба
massive deficit spending – значительные по объему расходы, создающие бюджетный дефицит
public works – гражданские работы
protectionist measures – протекционистские меры
self-sufficiency – самодостаточность
syndicalist front – синдикалистский фронт
turn out – оказыватьсяExercise 6
Answer the questions:
1. Where does the word «fascism» come from?
2. How do private property and the profit motive correlate with the interests of the state under fascism?
3. What did economic fascism in Italy grow from?
4. What was for the Italian nationalists the sure way to win a greater share of the world\'s wealth?
5. How were economic decisions made in Mussolini\'s Corporative State?
6. What program did Mussolini begin in 1925?
7. What measures were taken to make Italy self-sufficient economically?
8. What do Mussolini\'s fascism and Hitler\'s nazism, as economic systems, have in common?
9. What signs of fascism\'s failure in Italy were visible before World War II?
10. Whose needs did Mussolini want to satisfy by building the system of Corporative State?2. Экономические учения (Economics)
1
– What is Economics?
– Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists.
2
– What is an Economist?
– An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn\'t happen today.
3
– How do Economists work?
– Economists don\'t answer the questions others make because they know what the answer is. They answer because they are asked.
4
– Why is Economics so helpful?
– Economists have forecasted 9 out of the last 5 recessions.
5
A study of economics usually reveals that the best time to buy anything is last year.
Economics and Life
1
A grade school teacher was asking students what their parents did for a living. «Tim, you be first. What does your mother do all day?»
Tim stood up and proudly said, «She\'s a doctor.» «That\'s wonderful. How about you, Amy?» Amy shyly stood up and said, «My father is a mailman.» «Thank you, Amy» said the teacher. «What does your parent do, Billy?» Billy proudly stood up and announced, «My daddy plays piano in a brothel.» The teacher was aghast and went to Billy\'s house and rang the bell. Billy\'s father answered the door. The teacher explained what his son had said and demanded an explanation. Billy\'s dad said, «I\'m actually an economist. How can I explain a thing like that to a seven-year-old?»
2
The mathematician\'s child and the economist\'s child were in the third grade together, and the teacher asked, «If one man with one shovel can dig a ditch in ten days, how long would it take ten men with ten shovels to dig the same ditch?» Both children raised their hands.
The teacher said to the mathematician\'s child, «Johnny, how long?» and little Johnny said, «One day, teacher.»
The teacher looked at the economist\'s child and said, «John Maynard, is that right?»
Little John Maynard said, «Teacher, it all depends.»
Слова и выражения:
aghast – пораженный ужасом, ошеломленный
dig – копать
ditch – канава
explanation – объяснение
extremely – в высшей степени
forecast – прогнозировать
mailman – почтальон
announce – объявлять
brothel – груб . публичный дом
predict – предсказывать
proudly – гордо
recession – спад ( в эконо – мике )
reveal – показывать, открывать, обнажать
shovel – лопата
shyly – скромно, застенчиво
do for a living – зарабатывать на жизнь
how long would it take – сколько это заняло бы времени
it depends – это зависит (от многих обстоятельств)
Exercise 1
Answer the questions:
1. Who is economics most useful for?
2. What will economist know tomorrow?
3. Why do economists answer questions when asked?
4. When is the best time to buy things, according to economics?
5. Why couldn\'t Billy\'s father explain to his son what he did for his living?3
Two government economists were returning home from a field meeting. As with all government travellers, they were assigned the cheapest seats on the plane so they each were occupying the centre seat on opposite sides of the aisle.
They continued their discussion of the knotty problem that had been the subject of their meeting through takeoff and meal service until finally one of the passengers in an aisle seat offered to trade places so they could talk and he could sleep. After switching seats, one economist remarked to the other that it was the first time an economic discussion ever kept anyone awake.Monetarism
One of the principal monetarist propositions is the association between money growth and inflation: inflation is produced if sustained money growth exceeds the growth of output. If a government wants to end inflation or produce deflation, money growth must be lower than the growth of output. In the years since World War II, almost all countries experienced inflation. Some countries, such as Chile, Israel, Brazil, Argentina, Italy, Japan, Turkey, and the United States have increased or reduced inflation at different times by speeding up or reducing the rate of money growth. In some of these countries the changes in money growth and inflation have ranged over hundreds or thousands of percentage points.
The Federal Reserve System (the US Central Bank) increased money growth in the late sixties to finance government spending for the Vietnam War and for the War on Poverty. As the result inflation increased. By the late seventies money growth was nearly 7 percent a year on average and inflation reached an 8 percent average. On the whole prices doubled in less than a decade. Money growth slowed and remained low after the middle eighties. In the five years ending in 1991, inflation and money growth were back at the levels of 1965 to 1969. Table
1 shows these and other periods.
U.S. Money Growth and Inflation
(compound annual rates in percent)
Money Growth Inflation
1960–64 2.8 1.6
1965–69 4.9 3.7
1970–74 6.0 6.0
1975–79 6.9 7.9
1980–84 6.6 7.3
1985–89 7.2 3.5
1987–91 4.4 3.8
There is a general association between money growth and inflation, but this relation is not mechanical. Although average money growth remained high in the years from 1985 to 1989, inflation fell. It shows that money growth in excess of output growth is a necessary but not the only condition for inflation.
A second monetarist idea is the relation between inflation and the interest rates. When inflation is going to be high, interest rates on the open market are high. In addition the foreign-exchange value of a currency falls relative to more stable currencies. Interest rates in 1989 reached 8,000 percent a year in Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav dinar depreciated against the dollar from 0.03 to 1, to 10.6 to 1. At the same time Brazilian currency (under various names) fell from 0.01 to 177. The relation betweeen inflation and money growth is accounted for by the fact that high growth of money causes a flight from money that makes the currency worthless. Governments can control these effects of inflation for a short time, but they cannot do it permanently.
Currency depreciation or appreciation can be affected by numerous factors, such as growth of defense spending, government purchases, tax rates, productivity growth at home and abroad, and foreign decisions. Among them inflation is the most important: sustained inflation induces depreciation, and disinflation induces appreciation, as monetarists say.
A third monetarist proposition concerns the relation between inflation and output. When inflation increases, output often rises for a time above its trend rate. Deflation has the opposite effect, and recessions follow.
These monetarist assumptions about inflation, interest rates, exchange rates, and output, as well as about their interrelation are now widely accepted by policymakers. Central bankers follow guidelines for money growth, as they are well aware nowadays of the risks and the costs of inflation, their principal task being the maintenance of price stability.
Слова и выражения:accept – принимать
affect – оказывать воздействие
annual – годичный, ежегодный
appreciation – повышение стоимости
average – средний
aware – сознающий, понимающий
compound – совокупный, составной
concern – забота, озабоченность; быть озабоченным
currency – валюта
decade – десятилетие
defense – оборона, защита
deflation – дефляция
depreciate – снижаться в стоимости, девальвироваться
depreciation – снижение стоимости, девальвация, амортизация
dinar – динар
disinflation – дизинфляция
exceed – превосходить
excess – избыток, превышение
exchange – обмен
flight – полет, побег, бегство
guideline – контрольные показатели
induce – побуждать, возбуждать, вводить
interrelation – взаимодействие
maintenance – поддержание
mechanical – механический
monetarism – монетаризм
permanently – постоянно
policymaker – политик, организатор, разработчик политических решений
poverty