bbc6分钟英语听力中英 每日听力BBC六分钟-6

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bbc6分钟英语听力中英 每日听力BBC六分钟-6

bbc6分钟英语听力中英 每日听力BBC六分钟-6

提示:点击上方"小芳老师"免费关注哦

每日听力

每日听力内容来自BBC英语六分钟,英式英语,每日更新,和实际生活密切相关。每个听力文件6分钟,而且每次都有听力题目,可以用来备考四六级等各种英语考试考试。

听力方法:1. 听3-5遍以上,2. 对照文本听2遍,并查5-10个单词 3. 盲听5遍以上。4. 留言处写下问题的答案。只要你留言,我就给你上墙,留言格式:昵称 天数,e.g 爱酱-Day 4

In this programme, Neil and Catherine discuss why the super rich like to spend money on yachts. And they teach you six items of useful vocabulary

This week's question:

In which country is the percentage of super rich expected to grow fastest over the next 10 years?

a) China

b) Brazil

c) Vietnam

Listen to the programme to find out the answer.

Transcript

Note: This is not a word for word transcript

Neil

Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English – the programme where we bring you an interesting topic and six items of vocabulary. I'm Neil.

Catherine

And I'm Catherine. Today we're taking a look into the lives of the super rich – and we're going to look at one of their favourite pastimes.

Neil

The super rich are people with over $30 million US dollars of assets.

Catherine

Assetsare things we can own and sell – like property, boats and private planes.

Neil

Expensive toys. First things first, let's do our question, Catherine. In which country is the percentage of super rich expected to grow fastest over the next 10 years?

a) China

b) Brazil

c) Vietnam?

Catherine

I'm going to go for Vietnam. I think, that's an up and coming country and I think there is going to be a lot of growth in wealth in the future.

Neil

Ok, well we'll find out if you are right or wrong later. The number of super rich are expected to increase by 43% over the next decade.

Catherine

Now, this doesn't mean income is rising at the same speed for everyone. You might remember a report last year which said the world's richest 62 individuals owned as much as the poorest 50% of people in the whole world.

Neil

So, my question is – what on earth do people with so much money spend it on?

Catherine

One academic in the UK has been researching just that. And her answer is …, Neil?

Neil

Yachts! A yacht – a luxury boat used for pleasure. The ultimate status symbol– that is, an item which allows you to show off your wealth and position in society.

Catherine

Let's listen to Emma Spence from Cardiff University in the UK. What's so unusual about yachts?

INSERT

Emma Spence, PhD researcher, Cardiff University

If you have an exclusive wine collection or art collection or even the purchase of a business jet – these are investable assets– something that you can retain value on or accrue value on. A business jet, a private jet, can cut costs – and make businesses more convenient by running faster, more comfortably than commercial airlines. So these purchases, theymakegood, soundbusiness sense. Whereas a superyacht is essentially ablack hole.

Neil

Before we get to the yacht, Emma talked about certain assetslike planes and wine thatmade business sense.

Catherine

Now, to make sense – is a phrase you'll be familiar with. So, if we say something makes business sense, it means 'it's good for business'. But yachts are different.

Neil

Yachts, and especially what she calls superyachts, actually lose money. So much so, she calls a superyacht a black holeof wealth.

Catherine

A black hole, in scientific terms, is a place where gravity is so strong that nothing can escape – not even light. So, in business terms, a black hole eats all your money!

Neil

It's also used conversationally to mean 'a place where things go missing'.

Catherine

These superyachts are big. The world's longest is 180m in length. And they require a professional crew. Which is how Emma began her study – she used to work on the yachts.

Neil

She's now spent six years studying the world of superyachts and the super rich.

Catherine

So, what else did she learn?

Neil

She says that in the world of the super rich – the size of your yacht shows your place in the pecking order.

Catherine

The pecking ordermeans 'the social system from most powerful to least powerful'.

Neil

If you're higher up in the yachting pecking order, you get the best place in the harbour. Which is very important to yacht owners, apparently.

Catherine

Apparently, so. It's all about seeing and being seen. You could actually say that yachts are the ultimate form of conspicuous consumption. Now that's another great term – conspicuous means 'visible or noticeable' and consumption means 'spending'. So, the phraseconspicuous consumptionrefers to the kind of buying you do so that other people notice your money.

Neil

Before we sail off into the sunset Catherine, how about we answer today's question.

Catherine

I said that Vietnam is the country in which the percentage of super rich is expected to grow fastest over the next 10 years.

Neil

Well, I'm very pleased to say that you were right. It was in fact Vietnam – according to the same report by Knight Frank – the population of ultra wealthy is expected to grow by a staggering 170% in the next decade.

Catherine

Now, how about we have another look at the wealth of vocabulary in this programme?

Neil

Very good. We started with assets– here it means 'things we can buy or sell'. What are your assets?

Catherine

Oh, you know, my diamond rings, my bike, my laptop. I'm not like you though Neil, I don't live in an expensive mansion – that would be a real status symbol!

Neil

If only that were true, but it's a good example. A status symbolis a possession that shows off our wealth and our place in society.

Catherine

Yes, and we had the phrase to make business sense– in other words to be good for business. We could also say that a particular policy makes economic sense.

Neil

Or I could say investing wisely makes financial sense. Not like yachts which are expensive to buy and run. In fact, they're a black holefor our money.

Catherine

Now, did you know our next phrase, pecking order, actually comes from chicken behaviour?

Neil

And finally, the phrase conspicuous consumption. For example, you could say that dining at the finest restaurants wearing expensive clothes isconspicuous consumption.

Catherine

And to clear up two similar phrases: a status symbolrefers to the object itself, like a luxury car; whereasconspicuous consumptionrefers to the act of spending money on things like expensive cars but you're spending money so that other people notice.

Neil

Do check us out on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Neil & Catherine

Bye!

Vocabulary

assets

things you can buy and sell

status symbol

something you own to show off your wealth and social position

to make business sense

to be good for business

black hole

somewhere impossible to escape

pecking order

the informal social system from most to least powerful

conspicuous consumption

spending a lot of money so other people notice your wealth

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