BBC Learning English 6 Minute English Cutting Down, Eating Up
BBC Learning English 6 Minute English Cutting Down, Eating Up
BBC Learning English 6 Minute English Cutting Down, Eating Up
Neil: Hello!
Jackie: Today we’ll be looking at how changes in the economy are affecting
what people eat. As we do this, we’ll look at the language of money and
economies. First, a tricky question for you Neil… The word ‘economy’ comes
from the Ancient Greek word, ‘oikonomia’. What, literally, did the term
‘oikonomia’ mean? Was it
b) Management of a household
Neil: (answers)
Jackie: We’ll find out if you’re right at the end of the programme. Now, Britain
is currently officially in recession – now that’s a word we’ve been hearing
every day for many weeks, now…
Jackie: We hear other related terms like ‘economic slowdown’ which isn’t
quite as serious as a recession, but it’s a time when the economy isn’t doing so
well - an economic slowdown.
Neil: Yes, a similar expression is ‘an economic downturn’. Or you could say
there’s ‘a slump’ in the economy.
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Jackie: Of course, a recession may have all kinds of effects on people, including
the obvious effects such as people losing their jobs or being unable to find
work, but it’s also having an effect on what we eat. In what way? Are we eating
better or worse? Listen to our New York correspondent Mathew Price to find
out.
Mathew Price
Neil: Well it would seem we’re not eating so healthily, instead, we’re eating
more fast food.
Neil: Yes, ‘cut down’ is a handy phrase for talking about things that we start to
do less. My friend Pete, is trying to cut down on smoking, because he knows
it’s bad for him. People are cutting down on spending because they need to
save money.
Jackie: So as people cut down on spending, they’re also changing what they
Eat and eating less healthy food. Is that what you’re doing Neil?
Well it would seem we’re not eating so healthily, instead, we’re eating more
fast food.
Neil: Yes, ‘cut down’ is a handy phrase for talking about things that we start to
do less. My friend Pete, is trying to cut down on smoking, because he knows
it’s bad for him. People are cutting down on spending because they need to
save money.
Jackie: So as people cut down on spending, they’re also changing what they eat
and eating less healthy food. Is that what you’re doing Neil?
Neil: (answers)
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Jackie: You’re listening to bbclearningenglish.com. Listen to this next clip,
where we’ll hear Mathew go on to talk about how the changes in what people
are eating are affecting certain businesses. Which business?
Jackie: And in this case, the recession beating firms are fast food chains, that
do cheap food. Mathew used another word there to mean cheap…
Neil: He used the term ‘budget’, which means low cost. A ‘budget airline’, for
example, is an airline that offers services at quite a low cost. Budget food
retailers are firms that sell cheap food.
Jackie: And the figures suggest that certain budget food retailers are planning
to expand – to get bigger.
Neil: Yes, ‘expand’ is a term we might often hear when we talk about the
growth of the economy or a business. When the recession is over, hopefully
the economy will start to expand again. McDonald’s is planning to expand this
year – it wants to open more stores.
Jackie: Let’s hear more from Mathew. He’s going to talk about a study showing
how a lack of money affects obesity rates – the numbers of people who are
seriously overweight. Does having less money nowadays tend to make people
fatter or thinner?
Mathew Price Not so many decades ago a slimmed down wallet meant a
slimmer waistline. To be poor was to be underfed, and more often than not -
skinny. Not so these days apparently. A study in California has concluded that
when poverty rates increase by 10%, obesity rates also go up by 6%.
Jackie: Neil, does poorer mean fatter or thinner?
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Neil: Well strangely – at least in the western world – nowadays less money
means fatter. Mathew says a ‘slimmed down wallet’ – in other words, a wallet
that’s thinner because it doesn’t have much money in it – does not mean a
slimmer waistline.
Jackie: Yes, less money actually means fatter. Let’s have a reminder of some of
today’s key words and expressions. A recession an economic slowdown
An economic slump
To cut down
Budget
To expand
Neil: Goodbye!