Great news today is the U-turn in the 2011-2012 Budget! If you still don't know why, please read the following news from RTHK, audio clips included for listening practice.
Financial Secretary John Tsang |
Opinions:
Like I have mentioned before in Economics: Hong Kong Budget 2011-2012, keeping our tax money will help inflation is a very bad argument. I'm glad that our Financial Secretary finally hears the voices.
Will he earn good praises after this? Less anger for sure, but it was a redemption of his mistake, not an act of his intelligence.
How will you use that money?
I will definitely support using that money for investment. $6000 can be used to buy stocks, but then you will need to know which is a safe stock to buy.
If you are really going to spend it, I suggest you wait for iPhone 5, not because they are new and nice, but because they have a high resell value, so you'll get to use it, and get to have most of your money back. Then of course, you have to make sure your phone will not be stolen before you resell it.
If you want to spend it on food, I would recommend you use the money to buy some food that can be stored up to a year or two, because most of the agricultural commodities such as wheat, sugar, soybeans, oat and rice will only get more expensive in the future years as the weather damages food production worldwide.
Should we use the money for clothes or travelling? Not recommended, because once the money is spent, you do get joy and memories, but in the long run, these are very short-term gains.
What do you think?
Vocabulary:
radical -- (adj) believing or expressing the belief that there should be great or extreme social or political change
mandatory -- (adj) FORMAL describes something which must be done, or which is demanded by law
distribute -- (vb) [T] to give something out to several people, or to spread or supply something
placate -- (vb) [T] to stop someone from feeling angry
undermine -- (vb) [T] to make someone less confident, less powerful or less likely to succeed, or to make something weaker, often gradually
redemption -- (n) to be too bad to be improved or saved by anyone
commodity -- (n) [C] a substance or product that can be traded, bought or sold
Resources:
Handouts & tax rebates in budget U-turn @ RTHK
http://www.rthk.org.hk/rthk/news/englishnews/20110302/news_20110302_56_737728.htm
Economics: Hong Kong Budget 2011-2012 @ Locky's English Playground
http://lockyep.blogspot.com/2011/02/economics-hong-kong-budget-2011-2012.html
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/radical_1
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/mandatory
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/distribute
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/placate
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/undermine
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/redemption_1
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/commodity#commodity__3