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а максимум специалист!
Your vocabulary
Economy
– a system according to which the money, industry, and trade of a country or region are organized.
– a country’s economy is the wealth that it gets from business and industry.
– careful spending or the use of things in order to save money.
– large-size packages of goods which are cheaper than the normal sized packages on sale.
Economic
– concerned with economics and with the organization of the money, industry, and trade of a country, region, or social group.
– relating to services, businesses, etc. that produce a profit.
Economical
– something that is economical does not require a lot of money to operate.
– using the minimum amount of time, effort, language, etc. that is necessary.
Economics
– the study of the production of wealth and the consumption of goods and services in a society, and the organization of its money, industry, and trade.
Economist
– an expert or student of economics.
Economize
– save money by spending it very carefully and not buying expensive things.
Economic Institution
– a physical or mental structure that significantly influences economic decisions
Economic policy
– an action (or inaction) taken, usually by government, to influence economic events.
Economic model
– simplified representation of reality.
Positive Economics
– the study of what is, and how the economy works.
Normative Economics
– the study of how the economy should be, from society’s standpoint.
Ex. 1. To show that you understand the words given above, choose the best word to complete the following sentences. Add noun, verb or adverb endings if necessary.
1. Home … is a subject studied at school and college in which students are taught how to run a house well and efficiently.
2. New England’s … is still largely based on manufacturing.
3. All Western … are competing against each other.
4.These businesses contribute hundreds of millions of pounds to the … of the country.
5. I switched off the lights as an … measure.
6. If you make …, you take action in order to save money, by not spending it on unnecessary things.
7. You’ll have to travel … class.
8. Buy our new … packs of 100.
9. If you are really going to buy a car, we’ll have to … on other things.
10. In his works he explains the ideas of the great English … J.M. Keynes.
11. She thought of herself as an … wife.
12. This system was extremely … because it ran on half-price electricity.
13. What has gone wrong with the … system during the last ten years?
14. The book is very … written, but very warm.
15. … is the oldest of social sciences.
Ex. 2. Look at the following derivatives. Use your knowledge of English and logical reasoning to explain the meaning of each word below.
system, systematic, systematically, systematize, systemic
Use these words in the following sentences.
1. The police made a .... search of the building.
2. You need some … in your work if you want to succeed.
3. I wish they’d organize themselves more … .
4. … insecticides spread all through a plant and kill any insects that feed on it.
5. This method helps … the information received.
Ex. 3. Add appropriate words where there are blanks in the sentences below and you’ll get the definitions of the words in bold. Some words can be used in their different meanings.
imply, convey, standpoint, overall, range, scarce, free, available, utility, rate, output, environment, artifact, discretion
1. The … is the total set of outside forces surrounding and shaping the behaviour of the organization and its members.
2. To … information, ideas, feelings, etc. means to cause them to be known or understood by someone.
3. Someone or something that is … is not restricted, controlled by rules, customs, or other people.
4. An … is an object that is made by a person.
5. The … of something is the total area or extent within which it can operate effectively, and beyond which it is no longer effective.
6. If something is …, there is not very much of it, and there may be enough for those who want or need it.
7. If something is …, you can have it or use it without paying for it.
8. If you … people or things, you arrange them in a line or in lines.
9. If you … that something is the case, you suggest that it is the case without actually saying so.
10. The … at which something happens is the speed at which it happens over a period of time.
11. The … of something is how useful and practical it is.
12. … is used to describe a situation in general, including everything but not considering the details.
13. The … of taxation is the level of it.
14. If something is …, you are able to use it or obtain it.
15. A … is an important service such as water, electricity, or gas provided for everyone.
16. If you … something highly, you consider that it is important.
17. Someone who is … is not busy and is therefore free for you to talk to.
18. A … is a particular way of looking at or thinking about an event, situation, or idea.
19. Someone’s … is the amount of something that they make or produce.
20. … is the quality of behaving in a quiet and controlled way without drawing attention to yourself or giving away personal or private information.
Ex. 4. Give synonyms to the following words. Be ready to give your own examples to show the difference in their meanings.
Affect, effect, aggregate, change, demand, allocate, borrow, income, seek, require, fair, refer to, scarcity, ultimate, restrict.
Ex. 5. Give the opposite meaning to each word. Make up your own sentence with each word.
Push, appear, diverse, lend, facilitate, available, output, fair, increase, completely, complicate.
Ex. 6. Consult the dictionary and find the root words to the following:
Help, participate, contribute, allocate, mean, equitable, prevent, assemble, perform, imply, consider, scarce, benefit, value, societal, vary, certainly, compete.
Ex. 7. Make the following words negative.
Regard, responsible, desirable, respective, checked, doubt, certainty.
Ex. 8. Read the following definitions. Can you guess the word they all refer to?
1. A company or a business.
2. Something new, difficult, or important that you do or try to do.
3. A system of business, especially one in a particular country.
4. The ability to think of new and effective things to do, together with an eagerness to do them
(You can find the word in text 1, paragraph 1).
Now check your understanding. Insert the missing words. Translate the sentences into Russian.
1. He said he had doubts about the whole … .
2. This has done much to damage national … .
3. They are known to be the men of …, energy, and ambition.
4. I admire their … in trying to start up a new business.
5. This company is one of the largest … of this kind.
Ex. 9. Study the following words and word-combinations. What are their Russian equivalents?
to aim at, to arrange (for), game plan, to go ahead, a means to an end, on purpose, to set up, to tackle, to take action (on), to take steps, to take the initiative.
Translate the following sentences into Russian.
1. Our products are aimed at working mothers.
2. Let’s arrange for a meeting now. How about Friday, nine o’clock, your office?
3. OK, so we have arranged for finance and now we can go ahead with marketing.
4. The game plan for this morning’s meeting is to finish ordinary business in the first half hour, then take time out for coffee, so that, in the second half, we can zero in on the all-important question of new product development.
5. We use special offers in order to attract bigger orders – in other words, as a means to an end.
6. We have to reduce our overhead expenses. This will lead to job losses in some departments – an unpleasant fact, I’m afraid, but the end justifies the means.
7. Although everyone has to be at the meeting on time, the chairman will be a few minutes late, as usual, He does this on purpose, just to let everyone know who’s who in charge.
8. The company was set up ten years ago.
9. The government is doing all it can do to tackle the problems of housing and unemployment.
10. We need to take firm action, now, on the reduction in our market share – before matters get worse.
11. In the course of the next day or so, we shall be taking steps to put our plans into action.
12. For this job, we’re looking for someone with a go-ahead attitude, a self-starter, someone who’s prepared to take and maintain the initiative.
13.
Ex. 10. Look at the following Latin words. They may be helpful in your work with the texts on Economics and Business.
e.g. exempli gratia for example
i.e. id est that is
etc. et cetera and so on
viz. vide licet namely
c circa about, around (time)
v vide see
et al et ali and others
per se in itself
qua as
vice versa the reverse
ad hoc for this particular purpose
vs versus opposed
via 1.through
2.with the help of
per capita per head
ceteris paribus other things equal
ad valorem according to value
Ex. 11. What do the following words have in common and what do they differ in?
Matter, problem, dilemma, trouble, alternative, predicament, difficulty.
Ex. 12. Translate into Russian in written form.
In 1776, the Scottish professor of philosophy, Adam Smith, published The Wealth of Nations. In this book, the first systematic study of capitalism, Smith described his principle of the “invisible hand”. This principle states that each person, pursuing his or her self-interest without interference by government, will be led, as if by an invisible hand, to achievethe best good for society.
Self-interest drives people to action, but alone it is not enough. People must understand the effects of their decision and their economic well-being. They must think rationally if they are to make the right decisions.
Because of this, economists long ago introduced the concept of economic man. This notion holds that each person is motivated by economic forces. In other words, each person will always attempt to obtain the greatest amount of satisfaction for the least amount of sacrifice or cost. This satisfaction may take the form of greater profits for a businessperson, higher wages or more leisure time for a worker, and greater pleasure from goods purchased for a consumer.
Of course, these assumptions are not entirely realistic. People may be motivated by forces other than self-interest. Nevertheless, the idea of economic man does deserve as a reasonable approximation of the prevailing pattern of economic behaviour in a capitalistic society. And in economics, as in other social sciences, reasonable approximations are often the best that can be made.
LET’S READ AND TALK
1. What is meant by the word «system»? How do you understand it?
2. What systems do you know? Give your examples.
3. To what systems do you belong?
TEXT 1
WHAT IS SYSTEM?
Everybody is familiar with the word system and uses it in everyday language. We speak of heating systems, communication systems, economic systems, and transportation systems. We talk of cultural and social systems. The word system is used because it conveys the idea that these things are made up of parts and that the parts somehow interact with each other for some purpose or reason. A system is an organized or complex whole – an assemblage or combination of thingsor parts performing asa complex or unitary whole.
This definition implies several ideas. First is the concept ofinterdependency. If a change occurs in one part or set of parts, it affects all other parts of the system. This affect on each part may be direct or indirect.
A second implication of the definition of a system is the concept of wholism. This means that the system should be considered as a functioning whole. Changes in parts of the system and in the functioning of elements of the system should be considered from the standpoint of the system’s overall performance.
A third concept implied by the definition is synergism. This refers to the interactive effect of the parts of the system working together. The actual interaction of the parts creates an effect which is greater than the effect of the parts acting separately.
We’ve started our work with this small text about a system because we want you to bear in mind and apply the systematic approach to everything you see, hear, read or discuss, for everything in this world belongs to this or that system. While reading the texts pay attention to the economic and business terms. They’ll become the basis of your professional vocabulary.
TEXT 2
HISTORY OF ECONOMICS
In the 1500s there were few universities. Those that existed taught religion, Latin, Greek, philosophy, history, and mathematics. No economics. Then came the Enlightenment (about 1700) in which reasoning replaced God as the explanation of why things were the way they were. Pre-Enlightenment thinkers would answer the question, “Why am I poor?” with, “Because God wills it.” Enlightenment scholars looked for a different explanation. “Because of the nature of land ownership” is one answer they found.
Such reasoned explanations required more knowledge of the way things were, and the amount of information expanded so rapidly that it had to be divided or categorized for an individual to have hope of knowing a subject. Soon philosophy was subdivided into science and philosophy. In the 1700s, the sciences were split into natural sciences and social sciences. The amount of knowledge kept increasing, and in the late 1800s and early 1900s social science itself split into subdivisions: economics, political science, history, geography, sociology, anthropology, and psychology. Many of the insights about how the economic system worked were codified in Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, written in 1776. Notice that this is before economics as a subdiscipline developed, and Adam Smith could also be classified as an anthropologist, a sociologist, a political scientist, and a social philosopher.
Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries economists such as Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, John Stuart Mill, David Ricardo, and Karl Marx were more than economists; they were social philosophers who covered all aspects of social science. These writers were subsequently called Classical economists. Alfred Marshall continued in that classical tradition, and his book, Principles of Economics, published in the late 1800s, was written with the other social sciences in evidence. But Marshall also changed the question economists ask; he focused on the questions that could be asked in a graphical supply-demand framework. In doing so he began what is called neo-classical economics.
For a while economics got lost in itself, and economists learned little else. Marshall’s analysis was downplayed, and the work of more formal economists of the 1800s (such as Leon Walras, Francis Edgeworth, and Antoine Cournot) was seen as the basis of the science of economics. Economic analysis that focuses only on formal interrelationships is called Walrasian economics.…….
1. The text you’ve read gives a very brief view of the history of Economics. What other names (schools, theories) can you give to continue the story?
TEXT 3
Read the text. Define the main idea of each paragraph.
THE ECONOMIC SYSTEM
There are many forms of economic order, ranging from the mixed private enterprise system to partially or completely controlled economies. Regardless of their form, however, economic system is the system that a society uses for allocation and distribution of scarce resources. Private enterprise means that decisions about what and how much to produce are left to the discretion of owners and managers. In controlled economies such decisions are the responsibility of some governmental agency. There is, of course, no economy today that is completely free of governmental influence, nor is this condition necessarily undesirable. There are many beneficial services and protections available from government. The question then is a matter of degree. Irrespective of the form of economic order, it performs certain valuable functions in the life of organizations of all types.
Among the functions of the economic order the most important one is to provide some means of resource allocation. In a private enterprise this function is basically performed by the price mechanism. This simply means that demand for and supply of goods and services interact to set their market price. In the case of regulated utilities, there are governmental agencies such as public service commissions that determine the rates that may be charged by utility companies. These rates are set at the level that will allow a fair return on investments made by the companies. This form of regulated monopoly is considered, on balance, preferable to unchecked competition. This is true because of efficiency reasons. In taking actions in the area of employment, government is attempting to control the economy in such a fashion as to help the business community operate at the level of production that will yield full employment.
Without a system of distribution economy simply could not exist. A major part of this distribution system is credit. Economy flourishes on credit or extended methods of payment. Such a system literally affects every link in the distribution chain from the supplier of raw materials to the ultimate consumer. Without this vital financing function being performed, the economy would doubtless be forced to a lower order of production.
Economic goals for a nation include price stability, full employment, economic growth, and equitable distribution of income. Price stability contributes to the efficient allocation of resources and facilitates long-term planning. Full employment means that jobs are available for those seeking work. Higher standards of living require increased output per person (economic growth per capita). An equitable distribution of income means that the fruits of the economy are divided in a way that seems fair to the majority of the people. With the long-run trend toward a more sophisticated, highly integrated economic system, it is becoming increasingly important for an individual decision maker to be aware of the macroeconomic environment.
1. What is a system?
2. What are three main concepts of a system? What do they imply?
3. What is an economic system?
4. What functions does economic order perform?
5. What do economic goals for a nation usually include?
TEXT 4
Read the text. Make up the plan and retell the text using your plan.
PROLOGUE TO ECONOMICS
There is almost universal agreement that economies are becoming more complex every year and that an understanding of how an economy works is more important than ever before. For someone who is just beginning to study economics, the task indeed appears to be a difficult one. Economics is the study of the way in which mankind organizes itself to solve the basic problem of scarcity. All societies have more wants than resources, so that a system must be devised to allocate these resources between competing ends. In a very real sense, the complexity of the economy makes it difficult to decide exactly where to start. Simultaneously, production is taking place, goods and services are being allocated, and a great number of market participants are being motivated by a diverse set of goals. In addition, there is the complex financial system in which individuals, firms, and governments borrow and lend funds.
Economics is divided into two major branches: macroeconomics and microeconomics. Macroeconomics is the study of behavior of the economy as a whole with emphasis on the factors that determine growth and fluctuations in output, employment, and the level of prices. Macroeconomics studies broad economic events that are largely beyond the control of individual decision makers and yet affect nearly all firms, households, and other institutions in the economy. Specialists in macroeconomics are particularly interested in understanding those factors that determine inflation, unemployment, and growth in the production of goods and services. Such an understanding is necessary in order to develop policies that encourage production and employment while controlling inflation.
The other major branch of economics is microeconomics. Microeconomics is the study of behavior of individual units within the economy. The division of economics has resulted from the growing complexity and sophistication of economic research.
These two approaches and the topics they include are in fact interdependent. Individuals and firms make their decisions in the context of the economic environment, which has an impact on the constraints the decision makers face as well as their expectations about the future. At the same time, when taken as a whole, their decisions determine the condition of the overall economy. A good understanding of economic events and an ability to forecast them require knowledge of both individual decision making and the way in which individuals react to changes in the economic environment.
1.Economies are becoming more complex every year. Why?
2.What is the main division of economics?
3.What is macroeconomics «responsible for»?
4.What does microeconomics deal with?
TEXT 5
1.In what context can we use the word environment?
2.What elements of the environment can you mention?
3.Which ones are of the most importance?
Read the text. Be ready to define the key-sentence(s) of each paragraph. Explain your choice.
Read
MACRO ENVIRONMENT
Macro environment is the network of systems composed of culture, political and economic forces, technology, skill mixes, and consumer groups; a source of opportunities and constraints for the organization. Once the organization has built its product or defined its service, it must distribute it to consumer client groups who have wants and needs that they attempt to satisfy through the consumption of such products and services.
Every organization exists within an extensive and complex environmental network. Organizational environment refers to all groups, norms, and conditions with which an organization must deal. It includes such things as the political, cultural, economic, religious, educational, and like systems that affect an organization and which in turn affected by it. Table 1 provides a summary of environmental subcomponents.
Table 1.
Culture, composed of values, norms, artifacts, and accepted behavior patterns, affects the way the organization is formed and how it operates once in existence. Indeed, one must recognize that all of the decisions made in an organization are culture bound; i.e., they are a reflection of all these components of culture. Societal norms are those standards that mold behavior, attitudes, and values of those members who constitute a society. They come from laws, customs, religious teachings, and common practice. They are standards because members take them into account in their decisions and behavior. Dress, speech, what is considered to be in good taste, and the general understanding of what is right and wrong are all affected by societal norms. At the same time, almost every institution in a society is capable of transfusing some of its values, norms, and behavior patterns into its environment. Organizations can hardly afford to ignore such a vital ingredient in its macro environment.
Political forces are classified as the form and role of government in a society. The source of law and other regulations that restrict or at least affect the organization, the political system also is the source of a rich variety of services for the organization. These services range from fire and police protection to the provision of recreational areas. When one thinks of the governmental sector, one might be likely to think of its negative connotation and red tape. Although there is an element of restriction originating from the political sector, it is by no means dominant. Even though the presence of the political system has served to complicate management’s job, it has also made it easier at the same time. By knowing that all similar organizations must observe the same rules and regulations, managers can experience an element of certainty in their activity. They know that they have a source of protection and redress when violations do occur.
The political system is coupled with the economic system. The type of economy a society has can range from private enterprise to planned economy. Whatever its form, the economic system is concerned with the allocation of scarce resources and the provision of some form of distribution. It is, in practice, quite difficult to separate the political and economic systems from each other.
The macro environment is also the source oftechnology – the machines, techniques, and methods required for production and distribution. To be able to compete successfully, organizations must have access to modern technology. It is simply not feasible for an organization to compete unless an adequate level of technology is available to it. It can be safely stated that organization success is measured by the ability of the organization to adjust to and to employ technological innovations. Among their responsibilities, managers today must count the obligation to maintain a spirit of creativity and ingenuity among members so that continued progress on the technological front can be made. The ever-growing shortages of resources of all types are but one indication of the seriousness of this obligation.
Skill mix in the labor force is likewise an important facet of an organization’s macro environment. All organizations depend to some extent on a supply of labor that possesses the skill and ability to perform the work necessary to attain objectives. Consequently, labor market conditions and skill mixes are crucial to success.
The consumers are the ultimate arbiters of the organization’s success, for it is they who make the critical choices to consume or not to consume an organization’s output. Without the income (in whatever form) that results from this consumption, the organization is doomed to a relatively short life. This means that managers must be more aware of and sensitive to the total environmental complex of their organization in order to develop and implement plans for successfully coping with it. Otherwise, there is little chance for success, for по longer willyesterday’s methods based on a placid environment serve in today’s turbulent outside world.
1.What is macro environment?
2.Why is macro environment a source of constraints and opportunities for an organization?
3.What is «the most influential element» of the environment?
4.What element can people influence?
TEXT 6
Read the following text. Define its main topic. Divide the text into logical parts. Give the title to the text and to each part. Explain the meanings of the words and phrases which have been highlighted.
The study of economics would be incomplete without an understanding of the nation’s role in the world economy. The study of the world economy is known as “international economics”. International economics embraces two broad areas of interest: international trade and international finance. World trade has been gaining increasing significance among nations. Why do nations trade? The answer is that nations have different quantities and qualities of economic resources and different ways of combining them. As a result, each country can produce certain goods more efficiently, or at relatively lower costs, than others. This idea can be stated somewhat differently. Imagine a world consisting of only two countries, each producing the same goods. Under such circumstances, the alternative or opportunity cost to each country of producing more of one good is the amount of the second good that must be sacrificed. In view of this, which of the two goods should the countries produce? The answer is that each should specialize. When two parties engage, the sacrifice that each makes to obtain something from the other is called the “terms of trade”. For example, in order to buy a book, you might have had to give up five visits to the movies. Your terms of trade, therefore, are 5 movies = 1 book. The terms of trade for a given transaction equal the number of units of goods that must be given up for one unit of goods received by each party to the transaction. Or in other words, terms of trade are defined as the ratio of the prices of its export commodity to the price of its import commodity. Despite the fact that trade is of great importance for each nation, all countries impose restrictions of one form or another to protect some of their domestic industries. The restrictions may be of several types: tariffs, import quotas, nontariff barriers. Tariffs are customs duties or taxes imposed by a government on the importation of a good. Tariffs may be (1) specific, in the form of a tax per unit of the commodity, or (2) ad valorem, based on the value of the commodity. Import quotas are laws that limit the number of units of a commodity that may be imported during a specified period. Nontariff barriers are any laws or regulations, other than tariffs, that nations impose in order to restrict imports. For instance, to “protect the health and safety” of their citizens, many countries establish higher standards of quality for various kinds of imported goods than for similar goods produced domestically.
Ex. 13. Insert the missing words given below.
Consumption, take account of, manager, state, environment, include, capital, macroeconomics, economy
In a simplistic … in which individuals or families produce primarily for their own …, economy-wide phenomena are of little importance. On the other hand, the complex financial … and production process that characterizes an advanced economy in the 1980s requires individual decision makers … both the current economic environment and forecasts of the economic environment. Decisions that require an understanding of the overall functioning of the economy … business decisions such as whether firm should sell bonds or stock to raise new … and individual decisions such as whether to change jobs or purchase a new home. Whether a person «wears the hat» of an entrepreneur, a business …, or a head of a household, it is important to be aware of the … of the economy as a whole. Specific factors that determine the advisability of these and other decisions are studied as part of … .
Ex. 14. Add an appropriate preposition to each of the following sentences where indicated.
1. This refers … the interactive effect of the parts of the system working together.
2. They decorated the house regardless … cost.
3. Economic forms range … the mixed private enterprise … completely controlled economies.
4. Everyone, irrespective …means or occupation, shall have an equal opportunity.
5. This function is basically performed … the price mechanism.
6. This simply means that demand … and supply … goods and services interact.
7. Gradual change is preferable …sudden, large-scale change.
8. Such a system affects … every link in the distribution chain.
9. They have to satisfy their wants and needs … the consumption of such products and services.
10. It has also made it easier …the same time.
11. The political system is coupled … the economic system.
12. Organization must have access .. modern technology.
13. All organizations depend … supply of labour force.
14. The economic system is concerned … the allocation of scarce resources.
15. We must try to cope … our problems.
16. The entrance door gives access … the living room.
Ex. 15. Open the brackets.
The Price System
Who (to tell) workers where (to work) or what occupation to choose? Who (to declare) haw many cars should (to produce) and how many homes should (to built)? Who (to specify) the predominant style of women’s dresses or men’s suits?
The greater the degree of competition the more these matters (to decide) impersonally and automatically by the price system or the market system. This may ( to view) as a system of rewards and penalties. Rewards (to include) profits for firms and people who (to succeed). Penalties (to include) losses, or probably bankruptcy, for those who (to fail). The price system (to be) fundamental to the traditional concept of market economy.
The price system basically (to operate) on the principle that everything that (to exchange) – every good, every service, and every resource – (to have ) its price. In a free market with many buyers and sellers, the prices of these things (to reflect) the quantities that sellers (to make) available and the quantities that buyers (to wish) (to purchase).
Thus, if buyers (to want) (to purchase) more of a certain good than suppliers (to have) available, its price (to rise). This (to encourage) suppliers (to produce) and (to sell) more of it. On the other hand, if buyers (to want) (to purchase) less of a certain good than suppliers (to prepare) (to sell), its price (to fall). This (to encourage) buyers (to purchase) more of it.
This interaction between sellers and buyers in a competitive market, and the resulting changes in prices, (to be) what most people (to refer) to by the familiar phrase “supply and demand”.
1.Read the text once again and answer the following question: “What role does the price system play in the market economy?”
Ex. 16. Study the following words and word combinations. They are used when you are to describe different trends of economic development. Consult a good dictionary and put down all their derivatives. Make your own sentences using these words. You can do it in the form of a question to your partner.
increase, raise, put up, step up, extend, expand, rise, grow, soar, boom;
decrease, drop, put down, cut, reduce, fall, go down, decline, collapse, slump; remain stable, hold, maintain, stay constant.
to stand at
to reach a peak of
dramatic(ally)
rapid(ly)
quick(ly)
vast(ly)
huge(ly)
enormous(ly)
substantial(ly)
considerable(ly)
significant(ly)
moderate(ly)
gradual(ly)
slight(ly)
a little
slow(ly)
Ex. 17. A picture is worth 1000 words. Economists, being efficient, like to present ideas in graphs, which are a type of picture. But graph is worth 1000 words only if a person looking at it knows the graphical language (graphish). Study the following information to be able to read any graph. Find the Russian equivalents for the highlighted words.
Graphs are used in two ways: 1. to present an economic model or theory which focus on hypothetical relationships; 2. to present real-world data visually. Actually, these two ways of using graphs are related. They are both ways of presenting visually the relationship between two things.
Graphs are built around a number line, or axis (axes, pl). Axes are called vertical and horizontal. We can plot the information on two axes. When we connect two points we have a line. Even if the line is straight, economists call any such line drawn on a graph a curve. A curve can bea linear curve, a downward-sloping curve, an upward-sloping curve, a nonlinear curve.
Economists use the following graphs in presenting actual economic data:
Line graph Bar graph
Flow chart Pie chart
Ex. 18. Give the English equivalents to the following.
Приобретает все возрастающее значение; альтернативные издержки; при таких условиях; который должен быть принесен в жертву; постарается быть самодостаточным; тарифы; квоты на импорт; условия торговли; нетарифные барьеры; навязывать ограничения; защитить отечественную промышленность; таможенные пошлины; налог на единицу товара; в определенный период; установить более высокий стандарт качества на товары.
Ex. 19. Translate the following sentences into English.
1.Это следует рассматривать с точки зрения действия всей системы. 2.Одна из ее функций – эффективное размещение ресурсов. 3.Рыночная цена – результат взаимодействия спроса и предложения на товары и услуги. 4.Экономика не может существовать без системы распределения. 5.Все решения – это отражение всех компонентов культуры. 6.Когда мы говорим о государственном секторе, мы подразумеваем бюрократический аппарат. 7. Если происходит нарушение закона, они знают, что у них есть защита. 8.Чтобы успешно конкурировать, организация должна иметь доступ к современным технологиям. 9.Все организации зависят от предложения рабочей силы. 10.Руководитель должно четко реагировать на все изменения в деловой среде. 11.В конечном итоге, успех организации определяют потребители.
Ex. 20. Let’s review the core concepts of economics. Translate the following into Russian.
1. Economics is the study of how people, individually and collectively, allocate their limited resources to try to satisfy their unlimited wants.
2. Scarcity occurs because human wants exceed the production possible with our limited time and resources.
3. A good is any item or service that satisfies a human want and, in so doing, adds to human happiness.
4. Production entails using technology to apply energy to materials in ways that make the materials more valuable, or that otherwise help satisfy human wants.
5. Labour resources are the physical and mental talents that people can make available for production.
6. Opportunitycost is the value of the best alternative surrendered when a choice is made.
7. Absolute prices are prices in terms of some monetary unit.
8. Relative prices are the prices of goods or resources in terms of each other, and are computed by dividing their absolute prices by one another.
9. Economic efficiency is achieved when we produce the combination of outputs with the highest attainable total value, given our limited resources.
10. Inputs are resources used in the production process, such as labour and raw or semifinished materials.
11. Outputs are transformed materials; the results of production.
12. Demand is the quantity of a specific good that people are willing and able to
buy during a specific period, given the choices available.
13. Supply refers to the quantity of a specific good that sellers will provide under alternative conditions during a given period.
14. Market equilibrium occurs at the price-quantity combination where the quantities demanded and supplied are equal.
15. Asurplus is the excess of the quantity supplied over quantity demanded when the price is above equilibrium.
16. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total market value of goods and services produced within a country during some period, usually one year.
17. Gross National Product (GNP) is the value of all output produced by resources owned by the citizens of a country.
18. Economic growth is a positive quantitative change in an economic system; occurs when a society acquires greater productive capacity that can be used for consumption or investment.
19. Capital is all physical improvements made to natural resources that facilitate production, including buildings and all machinery and equipment.
20. Wealth is the value of the assets owned by an individual or a group of individuals.
SPEAK AND WRITE
1.Why is it important to view organizations open systems interacting with their environment?
2. Do you know any closed systems? Give some examples.
3. Give your own examples of the environmental influence on a business / on an individual.
4. Prepare a short report on the biography of a famous economist.
5.What would happen to standards of living in your country if all foreign trade were prohibited? How significant do you think this would be? In what areas would this impact be the strongest?
6.Does everything have a price? Are there some things you would not do regardless of price? Remember: prices and money are not synonyms; prices may be nonmonetary.
7. Summarize the information of the Unit to be ready to speak on Economics. The first step to be done is to write the plan of your future report.
8. Choose any question (problem, topic) relating to Economics and prepare a 5-7 minute report. Refer to different additional sources to make your report instructive, interesting and informative.