- •Английский язык для студентов экономических факультетов университетов
- •Авторский коллектив: г. И. Коротких, Гал. И. Коротких, н. Э. Бирман, о. А. Гизатулина, о. В. Калиш, н. В. Тунева
- •Предисловие
- •Методические рекомендации по изучению английского языка студентами-экономистами
- •1. Цели и задачи курса
- •2. Чтение как основное коммуникативное умение
- •3. Форма и смысл грамматической конструкции
- •It was supposed that he would write an article on
- •4. Единицы несоответствия в английском и русском языках
- •I wanted him to explain the term macroeconomics.
- •I saw him pay by credit card.
- •5. Методика работы над текстом
- •6. Британский или американский английский?
- •Text a The English We Learn
- •Грамматический обзор 1
- •Утверждения (statements)
- •Общие вопросы (general questions)
- •Специальные вопросы (special questions)
- •Грамматический обзор 2
- •2 ) Have has/ has got/ have/ have got Present Simple Tense
- •Примечания:
- •Expressing Agreement and Disagreement
- •Greetings and Introductions
- •Introductory Note
- •Text b
- •International words.
- •Varieties of English
- •Young Britons avoid learning languages
- •Culture and intercultural communication
- •British and American English
- •Independent reading:
- •Text a The Subject-matter of Economics
- •General questions (общие вопросы)
- •Short answers (краткие ответы)
- •Full answers (полные ответы)
- •Special questions (специальные вопросы)
- •Грамматический обзор 2
- •Likes and Dislikes
- •Preferences
- •Грамматический обзор 4
- •1. Working in pairs discuss the following questions under the headings I – III.
- •2. Give a talk in class on the topic “The Subject-matter of
- •I. Economics and Society
- •II. The subject-matter of economics
- •III. Economic systems
- •Text b University Life in Russia and in Great Britain
- •1) Facilities for studies at your university,
- •2) Subjects you consider to be the most important for
- •3) An ideal curriculum for a faculty of economics.
- •Project work 1
- •Project work 2
- •Independent reading
- •Colleges and University Colleges in the usa
- •A Student in Economics
- •Independent reading:
- •1. Study carefully the meanings of the following words and phrases in bold type from text a to avoid any difficulty in understanding.
- •Passive Voice
- •Ruined Holiday
- •Грамматический обзор 2
- •Grammar in context: Student profile
- •Text b global brands
- •Грамматический обзор 3 Read grammar guide 3 for practicing and developing study skills to cope with difficulties of reading English grammar textbooks.
- •Grammar in context Present simple and present continuous
- •Making Requests
- •Refusing a Request
- •Accepting a Request
- •Expressing Personal Opinions or Personal Points of View
- •Study Notes on Developing Reading Skills
- •1. Previewing.
- •2. Highlighting.
- •3. Annotating.
- •Independent reading
- •Consumerism as an unfortunate by-product of global market economy
- •Introduction
- •Vocabulary notes
- •New terms from the last global recession
- •Introduction
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Introduction
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Advertising
- •Introduction
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Figures, numbers and calculations
- •1. Cardinal and Ordinal Numbers
- •1. Give English equivalents of the following:
- •2. Choose English equivalents from the box below
- •2. Calculations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division)
- •3. Vulgar Fractions (AmE - Common Fractions)
- •4. Decimal Fractions (Decimals)
- •6. Sums of Money
- •Numerical, statistical or graphical data
- •In economics
- •Text a Statistics and Econometrics
- •Topical vocabulary
- •Text b Tabular and graphical data (Reading for vocabulary building)
- •T here are different types of diagrams:
- •Some advice on describing (orally or in writing) diagrams/charts/graphs
- •Independent reading
- •Introductory Note
- •Economy of the United States (Reading for statistical and numerical data)
- •Table of numerical data (the first has been filled in for you)
- •Phrase bank
- •Travelling to Work in Britain (Presenting a survey results)
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Independent reading:
- •Text a Central Banks and Monetary Policy
- •The Infinitive
- •Функции инфинитива:
- •Grammar in context Gerund or infinitive?
- •Text b Bank Accounts and Cheques
- •Study Notes on Summary Writing
- •Credit cards
- •Vocabular notes
- •Checklist for writing a summary (based on the article Credit Cards)
- •Independent reading
- •Introduction
- •A General History of Money
- •1. Barter exchange and commodity money
- •2. Coins and Paper Money
- •3. Fiat Money
- •4. Fiat Money – Toilet Paper Money
- •Money and Banking (a short historical survey)
- •Vocabulary notes
- •I. Changing the way the pound is measured.
- •Independent reading
- •Text a Company Share Capital
- •Word formation and vocabulary building practice
- •1. Synthetical forms
- •2. The Past Perfect Subjunctive (эта форма омонимична The Past Perfect Tense)
- •3. Analytical forms
- •Grammar in context 1 First and second conditional
- •Grammar in context 2 The third conditional
- •I will return your book on economics I have read it.
- •1. In what way is ownership in a company certified? What do you call people who own shares and stocks?
- •Reading for professional vocabulary text b
- •Text b Business Organizations and Stock Markets
- •Translate into English making use if prompts in the box Рынки сырьевых товаров
- •Asian Crisis Affects Latin American Markets
- •Independent reading
- •Nouriel Roubini: The Economist Who Foresaw the Global Financial Crisis
- •Introduction
- •Vocabulary notes
- •Introduction
- •1. Market instability
- •3. The housing market declined
- •4. The credit well dried up
- •5. The Economic bailout is designed to increase the flow of credit
- •Taxation
- •Vocabulary notes
- •1. Статистика по переводам (xtr, сп и pe) :
- •Contents
Numerical, statistical or graphical data
In economics
Scan TEXT A (read it for specific information) to answer the following questions:
1. What is the basic difference between ‘statistics’ and ‘econometrics?
2. Did vital statistics exist in the ancient Greece? When did it begin in England?
3. What does statistics help you to avoid?
4. Is statistics always reliable? Do you agree with the remark made by Mark Twain about unreliability of statistics?
Text a Statistics and Econometrics
Statistics is a branch of mathematics that deals with the collection and analysis of numerical data. The collected data must be organized, tabulated and presented for interpretation and decision making.
Simple forms of statistics have been used since the beginning of civilization, when pictorial representations or other symbols were used to record numbers of people, animals, and inanimate objects on skins or sticks of wood and the walls of caves
Before 3,000 BC the Babylonians used small clay tablets to record tabulations of agricultural yields and of commodities bartered or sold. The Egyptians analyzed the population and material wealth of their country before beginning to build the pyramids in the 31st century BC.
The ancient Greeks held censuses to be used as bases for taxation as early as 594 BC. The Roman Empire was the first government to gather extensive data about the population and wealth of the territories that it controlled.
Registration of deaths and births was begun in England in the early 16th century. In the 19th century, with the application of the scientific method to all phenomena in the natural and social sciences, investigators recognized the need to reduce information to numerical values to avoid the ambiguity of verbal description.
At present, statistics is a reliable means of describing accurately the values of economic, political, social, psychological, biological, and physical data.
In economics, statistical methods are widely used to analyze, interpret and predict various economic factors. The branch of economics that studies statistics and uses mathematical methods to describe and explain how economic systems work is called econometrics. Econometrics is concerned with finding relationships between values that change (variables). In this case, economists try to find out if economic variable A (value A) changes every time variable B changes. The development of the theory of probability increased the scope of statistical applications in science in general and economics in particular
Many people believe that you can use statistics to prove anything that you want to prove, and that politicians and companies sometimes use them in dishonest ways. People also sometimes mention a famous remark made by the US writer Mark Twain: “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics”.
Topical vocabulary
statistics (plural) |
= a collection of numbers which represent facts or measurements or describe a situation |
statistics (uncountable noun)
statistics (singular
vital statistics
data (uncountable noun)
rate
|
= the science dealing with and explaining a collection of numbers; the branch of mathematics that deals with the collection, organization, and analysis of numeral data and with such problems as experiment design and decision making = a single number which represents a fact or measurement = certain facts, officially collected and arranged, about people’s lives, especially their births, marriages, deaths, and length of life = facts or information used for making calculations or decisions; facts, numbers, and other information that have been collected and stored especially on a computer NOTE : “data” is used as an uncountable noun although it is plural in its Latin form (“datum” is singular) норма, показатель, индекс, статистика, размер, скорость, уровень |
PHRASE FILE
1)
statistics show/indicate smth. 2) statistics show/indicate
that…
3)
to gather/to collect/to tabulate statistics
4)
the work involves a lot of statistical analysis
5)
to conduct/to carry out statistical survey 6) to differ
statistically
7)
official/convincing statistics
8)
statistics/data about/on…9) the presentation of statistics
10)
experimental/historical/statistical data
11)
unemployment/crime/inflation/divorce rate
12;
at a rate of 5
%...
13) interest rate
P
resenting
statistics we can use the following verbs to describe upward (
) and downward ( ) movements and changes in price, quantity and
amount.
Intransitive Usage (N + V + Adv )
increase
( to 15 %, sharply, slowly, by 20 %, slightly, steadily,
rise gradually, significantly, etc. )
go up NOTE: e.g. Sales of new cars in Europe fell/rose 9.6 %.
grow, climb (No preposition is used before 9.6 % to show how much
lower or higher in amount “sales” became).
decrease
e.g. Sales of new cars in Europe fell/rose
by 9.6 %.
fall (We use “by” for showing how much “sales” changed
drop when we think of them as compared to other levels or
decline quantities).
go down
e.g. The population of the world is increasing steadily.
e.g. The prices of electronic goods have dropped/fallen/decreased
lately.
Transitive usage ( V + N )
increase
( production, profits, prices, etc. )
raise
reduce
decrease
cut
lower
e.g. The owners of the house reduced its price by 20%.
e.g. 700 jobs will be lost in order to cut costs and boost profits.
e.g. The university is working to raise the number of students from state
schools.
The corresponding nouns: an increase, a rise, a decrease, a fall, a drop, a decline, a reduction
e.g. There are several competing companies entering the market and this has caused a 20 % drop in prices.
e.g. The company promised they would make no staff reductions next year.
Exercise 11. Complete the sentences below, using the words in the box to show what changes have occurred between last year and this year. Use each word once. The first has been done for you.
-
decline reduced increased risen
raised drop rise reduction
gone up fell
1. Tax last year: 10 %. Tax this year: 12 %.
The government has raised tax.
2. Cars last year: 2 million. Cars this year: 1.8 million.
There has been a _________in car production.
3. Price last year: $50. Price this year: $35.
The price of this product has been ________.
4. Employees last year: 40. Employees this year: 75.
There has been a ______ in the number of employees.
5. Orders last year: 10 million. Orders this year: 8 million.
Orders ______ this year.
6. Investment last year: $500,000. Investment this year: $650,000.
The company has _______ investment in new equipment.
7. Franchisees last year: 120. Franchisees this year: 300.
The number of franchisees has ______ .
8. Budget last year: 100 %. Budget this year: 25 %.
There has been a _______ in the budget.
9. Sales last year: $30,000. Sales this year: $35,000.
Sales have _______ .
10. Profits per factory last year: $1,000,000. Profits per factory this year: $850,000. There has been a _______ in profits per factory.
NOTE: When presenting statistics we often use the Present Perfect to denote a change or development that produces a particular result and is
likely to continue.
Skim TEXT B (read it quickly noting only chief points). Make a list of topical words and phrases.
