Добавил:
Upload Опубликованный материал нарушает ваши авторские права? Сообщите нам.
Вуз: Предмет: Файл:
Шпак.docx
Скачиваний:
0
Добавлен:
01.05.2025
Размер:
470.62 Кб
Скачать
  1. Answer the following questions:

  1. What are the differences between capitalist and socialist economies?

  2. What is «communism»?

  3. When and where had socialism its origin?

  4. Who are «utopian socialists»?

  5. What do the less developed countries need to increase production?

V VI. Define the terms:

capitalist economy socialist economy free entreprise living standard

farm productivity to allocate resources government prepared plan physical infrastructure

  1. Translate into English:

  1. Економіка вільного підприємництва передбачає існування приватної власності. 2. Умови праці на фабриках за тих часів були дуже поганими. 3. Розв'язання цих про­блем полягало у створенні маленьких ідеальних товариств, у яких фабриками володіли б робітники, а прибуток роз­поділяли між усіма. 4. Робота часто виконувалася чоловіками, жінками та дітьми у фізично небезпечних умовах. 5, При соціалізмі основні засоби виробництва належать державі, ресурси розподіляються за планом. 6. Що передбачає про­цес трансформації з низьким рівнем розвитку країни в су­часну державу? 7. Для підвищення життєвого рівня розви­ток економіки країни має передувати зростанню кількості населення. 8. Якщо випуск продукції за певний період часу зріс на 10 відсотків, а чисельність населення збільшилася на 15 відсотків, то життєвий рівень буде гірший, ніж був на початку цього періоду.

  1. Read and dramatize the following dialogue:

A,: Look, in 1986, my relatives as well as many other music lovers were treated to an extended daylong concert fea- , turing many rock and jazz greats. The Live Aid concert staged simultaneously in London's Wembley Stadium and Philadelphia's JFK Stadium was beamed via satellite to millions of viewers in Europe and America.

  1. : I remember the purpose of the concert. It was to raise funds for the starving people of Africa. The sight of the desperately hungry in Ethiopia a few years ago, and before that in the West African region of the Sahel, shocked and helped sensitize television viewers to the tragedy in these lands.

A.; Certainly. Some scholars place the major blame for these conditions on runaway population growth in nations of the undeveloped world.

  1. : In what way do they explain it?

A.: They explain that standards of living in many developing nations continue to decline because the growth in population is greater than economic growth.

  1. : No doubt. And if world economic growth continues to average about two percent annually, nearly half the world's people will live in countries where population growth exceeds economic growth.

A.: Much of what these writers had to say was foretold by an 18th -r- century English economist, Thomas Malthus. In his «Essay on Population» (1798) Malthus warned of the dire consequences of uncontrolled population growth.

  1. : What was his argument?

A.: His argument was direct and simple. While food supplies can be increased through the addition of land and labor, the rate of growth is in an arithmetic progression (2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and so on). But population growth expands in an geometric progression.

  1. : As far as 1 understood, given the difference between the rate of population growth and that of production, Malthus concluded that a large portion of humanity was doomed to a life of misery.

  1. : Worse yet, as the arithmetically increasing food production fell short of satisfying the geometrically increasing population, malnutrition and disease would take their toll until the rising death rate restored the balance between food and population.

  1. : Critics of Malthusian theory argue that the focus on population misses the main causes of hunger and starvation. The fact is that the agricultural nations grow enough to feed themselves and the rest of the world. However, not enough food reaches those in need because poor nations do not have the international currency with which to purchase it from world suppliers.