经济学人|哪个国家会最后摆脱通胀?

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

哪个国家会最后摆脱通胀? Finance and economics Price rises Curse of the Anglosphere Which country will escape inflation last? 财经版块价格上涨英语国家的诅咒哪个国家将最后摆脱通胀? In January prices across the rich world rose by 5.7% year on year, down from a peak in late 2022 of 10.7%。 今年1月,富裕国家的物价同比上涨5.7%,低于2022年末10.7%的峰值。 This conceals wide variation, however. 然而,这个数据掩盖了巨大的差异。 Some countries have slain the inflation beast. 一些国家已经消灭了通胀猛兽。 Others are still in the fight of their lives, 其他人仍在拼命与之搏斗。 To get a view of the various battlefields, we have updated our measure of "inflation entrenchment" for ten rich countries. 为了了解不同战场的情况,本刊更新了我们对十个富裕国家的“通胀顽固性”的衡量结果。 The measure comprises five indicators: core inflation, unit labour costs,"inflation dispersion", inflation expectations and Google-search behaviour. 该结果包括五个指标:核心通胀率、单位劳动力成本、“通胀分散”、通胀预期和谷歌搜索行为。 We rank each country on each indicator, then combine the rankings in order to form an overall score. 我们在每个指标上对每个国家进行排名,然后将排名组合在一起,形成总分。 The results are better than in November, when we last conducted the exercise. 结果比我们上一次在11月进行统计时要好。 They also reveal a linguistic divide. 这些结果还揭示了语言上的鸿沟。 Countries in the EU and Asia perform well; in the English-speaking world, inflation is taking longer to fade. 欧盟和亚洲国家表现良好,在英语世界,通货膨胀需要更长时间才能消退。 Australia tops the ranking, 澳大利亚位居榜首。 Britain and Canada are not far behind. 英国和加拿大紧随其后。 America is doing better, but even there inflation remains entrenched. 美国的情况正在好转,但即便如此,通货膨胀依然根深蒂固。 A few factors may explain the differences. 有几个因素可以解释这种差异。 One is fiscal stimulus during covid-19, which was 40% larger in the Anglosphere than elsewhere. 一个是新冠肺炎期间的财政刺激,英语国家的财政刺激规模比其他地方大了40%。 The boost to demand is still visible in "core" inflation data, which strips out items such as energy, and indicates underlying inflationary pressure. 对需求的提振在“核心”通胀数据中仍然可见,该数据剔除了能源等商品价格,表明根本的通胀压力。 British core inflation is close to 5%, 英国核心通胀率接近5%。 Our measure of "inflation dispersion" provides similar clues. 我们对“通胀分散”的衡量也得出了类似的线索。 This measures the share of consumer prices that are rising by more than 2% year on year. 这一指标衡量的是同比上涨超过2%的消费者价格所占份额。 Australia tops the rankings here. 澳大利亚在这方面位居第一。 By contrast, most Japanese prices are rising by less than 2%, 相比之下,大多数日本商品价格的涨幅都不到2%。 Immigration could also help explain the divide. 移民也可能有助于解释这种差异。 The rich world has experienced an immigration boom, with a large share of the new arrivals going to English-speaking countries. 富裕国家经历了移民热潮,很大一部分新移民流向了英语国家。 Last year Australia, Britain and Canada broke net-migration records. 去年,澳大利亚、英国和加拿大打破了净移民记录。 The large rise in population has supported demand. 人口的大幅增长支撑了需求。 In the past year the cost of renting a flat in the Anglosphere has risen by 8%, compared with 5% elsewhere. 在过去的一年里,在英语国家租一套公寓的成本上涨了8%,而在其他地方只上涨了5%。 The effects on labour markets are less clear. 通胀对劳动力市场的影响不那么明显。 America's unit labour costs, which measure how much firms pay workers to produce a unit of output, are not rising. 美国的单位劳动力成本并没有上升,单位劳动力成本衡量企业为生产一个单位的产出而付给工人多少工资。 But Canada's are growing strongly. 但加拿大的单位劳动力成本增长势头强劲。 History may also play a fole in explaining the Anglosphere's entrenched inflation 历史也可能有助于解释英语国家根深蒂固的通货膨胀。 During the 2010s southern Europe and much of rich Asia saw few price rises. 在2010年代,南欧和大部分亚洲富裕地区的物价几乎没有上涨。 Inflation in the Anglosphere was firmer. 但英语国家的通胀更为顽固。 Owing to these different experiences, people's current beliefs about future inflation may also differn, 由于这些不同的经历,人们目前对未来通胀的看法也可能不同。 Data coming out of America are worrying. 来自美国的数据令人担忧。 The public believes prices willrise by 5.3% over the next 12 months, more than in any other country in our ranking. 公众认为,未来12个月物价将上涨5.3%,超过排名中的任何其他国家。 Americans also often search on Google for inflation-related topics, suggesting that the cost of living is still on their minds. 美国人还经常在谷歌上搜索与通胀相关的话题,表明生活成本仍在让他们担心。 Across the Anglosphere the threat of continued high inflation-or even a second wave of price rises-has not gone away. 在所有英语国家里,持续高通胀-甚至出现第二波价格上涨-的威胁并未消失。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

4分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Newsround|什么是日食

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

What is a solar eclipse?| Newsround A total solar eclipse will darken the skies over large parts of North America early next week. 下周初,日全食将使北美大部分地区的天空变暗。 A partial eclipse will also be visible in some areas of the UK. 英国部分地区也能看到日偏食。 But what causes eclipses and how can you watch them safely? 但是是什么导致了日食以及如何安全地观看日食呢? Well, BBC's weather's Sophia Herrod has sent us this. 嗯,BBC 天气节目的 Sophia Herrod 给我们发了这个。 A total solar eclipse happens when the moon passes between the sun and the earth as they align, blocking the face of the sun. 当月球在太阳和地球对齐时穿过太阳和地球之间,挡住太阳的表面时,就会发生日全食。 Total solar eclipses occur once every one to two years, but only those in the narrow path of totality, when the moon completely covers the sun, get to see it. 日全食每隔一到两年发生一次,但只有那些处于日全食狭窄路径中的人,当月亮完全遮住太阳时,才能看到它. So where can you see it this year? 那么今年哪里可以看到呢? The full eclipse will happen across North America, passing over Mexico, the United States and Canada. 日全食将发生在北美,经过墨西哥、美国和加拿大。 If you're in the UK though, don't be disappointed because some of us can still see the partial solar eclipse. 如果您在英国,请不要失望,因为我们中的一些人仍然可以看到日偏食。 Look out for it just before the sunset at around 8pm, but of course the weather will play a part, so keep your eye on the latest forecast. 请留意晚上 8 点左右日落之前的天气,当然天气也会起到一定的作用,所以请密切关注最新的天气预报。 How can we view it safely? 我们如何才能安全地查看它? Well, you can't look directly at any phase of a solar eclipse because it'll damage your eyes. 好吧,你不能直接观看日食的任何阶段,因为它会损害你的眼睛。 But you can view it with protective eyewear like eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer. 但您可以佩戴防护眼镜(例如日食眼镜或手持式太阳观察器)观看它。 And you can even make your own at home. 您甚至可以在家自己制作。 To do this safely, check out the Newsround webpage on the Solar Eclipse 2024. 为了安全地执行此操作,请查看有关 2024 年日食的 Newsround 网页。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

1分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Newsround|小演员们纪念莎士比亚周

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

Meet the young actors celebrating Shakespeare Week I Newsround Theatre fans celebrated a special week in March dedicated to Shakespeare and his works. 剧院迷们在三月庆祝了一个特别的一周,专门纪念莎士比亚及其作品。 So we went to meet some young actors at the Stratford Playhouse to check out how they're honouring the legendary playwright with their special version of one of his most famous plays, Romeo and Juliet. 因此,我们去斯特拉特福剧院会见了一些年轻演员,看看他们如何用特别版本的传奇剧作家最著名的戏剧之一《罗密欧与朱丽叶》来纪念这位传奇剧作家。 We've been rehearsing Romeo and Juliet for Shakespeare week. 我们一直在为莎士比亚周排练《罗密欧与朱丽叶》。 I always really like Shakespeare because his plays are about love, tragedy and death. 我一直很喜欢莎士比亚,因为他的戏剧是关于爱情、悲剧和死亡的。 More woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo. 朱丽叶和她的罗密欧比这更不幸。 Shakespeare Week is the annual national celebration for primary school children. 莎士比亚周是一年一度的全国小学生庆祝活动。 It's finding out about his life as well as his plays and his characters and exploring some of the language. 这是了解他的生活、他的戏剧和他的角色,并探索一些语言。 I mean the children, although I've directed it, they've kind of helped me devise bits of it so they've created some of the freeze frames and images that you see on the stage and bits of the movement which is really really cool. 我的意思是孩子们,虽然是我导演的,但他们帮助我设计了一些东西,所以他们创造了一些你在舞台上看到的定格和图像以及运动的一些部分,这真的很真实。凉爽的。 This is the first time I'm going to perform on stage in a theatre. 这是我第一次在剧院的舞台上表演。 We're going to perform in front of a lot of people. 我们要在很多人面前表演。 To keep calm I'm going to take some deep breaths. 为了保持冷静,我要做几次深呼吸。 I'm a little bit nervous on being on a big stage but I think I can do it. 登上大舞台我有点紧张,但我想我能做到。 I think this event has made me more interested in Shakespeare because it makes me want to read more Shakespearean stories and what they're about. 我认为这次活动让我对莎士比亚更感兴趣,因为它让我想阅读更多莎士比亚的故事及其内容。 I think if Shakespeare was here to watch us perform, I think he would be very proud of us. 我想如果莎士比亚在这里观看我们表演,我想他会为我们感到非常自豪。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

1分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Media|新研究估算出全球蚂蚁总数

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

New study reveals how many ants there are in the world 新研究估算出全球蚂蚁总数 你有没有凝神思考过世界上到底有多少只蚂蚁?一组研究人员认为他们已估算出这个数字。 20 quadrillion sounds like a lot of ants, and it is. To give you an idea, that's two and a half million ants for every human on Earth. 20千万亿听起来像是很多只蚂蚁,事实也确实如此。这就相当于地球上每一个人对应250万只蚂蚁。 To count them at one a second would take 634 million years. So, no one's tried that. 以每秒数一只蚂蚁的速度,要6.34亿年才能数完。所以,没有人尝试过。 But the scientists involved in this report have made their estimate by consulting hundreds of studies from different habitats around the world. 然而参与这项研究的科学家们通过查阅世界各地不同蚂蚁栖息地的数百项研究做出了估算。 The study warns that the staggering figure may be an underestimate because of the lack of data from regions including Central Africa and Asia. 该研究提醒,由于缺少包括中非和亚洲等地区的数据,所以尽管这个数字惊人,但可能仍低估了蚂蚁的实际数量。 词汇表 quadrillion 一千万亿 give someone an idea 让某人大致了解情况 estimate 估算,估计 consulting 查阅 staggering 惊人的 underestimate 低估 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

0分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Newsround|复活节假期做什么?

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

Happy Easter everybody! 大家复活节快乐! I'm really looking forward to the Easter holidays because I get to eat lots of chocolates and sweets and I'm going away. 我真的很期待复活节假期,因为我可以吃很多巧克力和糖果,然后我就要离开了。 Easter's a nice time of year because it's not as wet and horrible as winter and all the flowers are coming out in the garden and it's really pretty outside. 复活节是一年中的美好时光,因为它不像冬天那么潮湿和可怕,花园里所有的花都在绽放,外面真的很漂亮。 I'm looking forward to Easter holidays because me and my friend are going camping and I can't wait. 我期待着复活节假期,因为我和我的朋友要去露营,我等不及了。 This Easter I'm going to wake up before all of my family and steal most of the eggs. 今年复活节我要在全家人之前起床并偷走大部分鸡蛋。 I really do hope they're not watching this. 我真的希望他们没有看到这个。 The thing I like most about the Easter holidays is I go to the beach and I've got loads of fun. 复活节假期我最喜欢的事情是去海滩,我玩得很开心。 It's the perfect time to play football because it's not usually muddy and things like that. 这是踢足球的最佳时机,因为通常不会出现泥泞之类的情况。 And it's the perfect time to have ice cream. 而且现在正是吃冰淇淋的最佳时机。 This Easter we go to my auntie's house to do a family tradition where we have a big Easter egg hunt. 今年复活节,我们去我阿姨家参加家庭传统活动,寻找复活节彩蛋。 Easter egg hunt. 寻找复活节彩蛋活动。 Big Easter egg hunt. 复活节彩蛋大搜寻。 I cannot wait for Easter holiday because I am going to Australia. 我等不及复活节假期了,因为我要去澳大利亚。 The only reason I'm going to Australia is pretty much to visit family and also a well-earned rest. 我去澳大利亚的唯一原因主要是探望家人以及好好休息。 I'm really excited for Easter and I hope you are too. 我对复活节感到非常兴奋,希望你也是如此。 Happy Easter everybody! 大家复活节快乐! ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

1分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Newsround|用剪纸纪念诺曼底登陆日80周年

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

Cutouts like these sometimes appear at roadsides in fields and memorials when people want to pay tribute to those who died during two world wars. 当人们想要向在两次世界大战中丧生的人们致敬时,这样的剪纸有时会出现在路边的田野和纪念碑上。 They represent the soldiers who fought for the UK and other nations. 他们代表为英国和其他国家而战的士兵。 Now, a school in Oxfordshire has been helping to make some that will be travelling to France to take part in a big anniversary. 现在,牛津郡的一所学校正在帮助制作一些将前往法国参加重大周年纪念日的作品。 This year marks 80 years since D-Day when forces from the UK, the US and other countries landed in France during the Second World War to fight against Germany and its allies. 今年是第二次世界大战期间英国、美国和其他国家的军队登陆法国对抗德国及其盟国的诺曼底登陆80周年。 This school has many children who have a connection to the armed forces and they explained what it meant to them. 这所学校有许多与武装部队有联系的孩子,他们解释了这对他们意味着什么。 It's like a privilege to be part of this project because when you see these outside in France you're going to know that you've been a part of this. 能够成为这个项目的一部分就像是一种荣幸,因为当你在法国以外看到这些时,你就会知道你已经参与了这个项目。 It means quite a lot though because my dad's in the RAF. 但这意义重大,因为我父亲在英国皇家空军。 When we see it up there in France it will be really special because we know that we've as a team made them. 当我们在法国看到它时,这将非常特别,因为我们知道我们作为一个团队创造了它们。 The cutouts will be painted, decorated with poppies and put on display as part of the official commemorations this summer. 这些剪纸将被涂上油漆,用罂粟花装饰,并作为今年夏天官方纪念活动的一部分进行展示。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

1分钟
99+
1年前

BBC 随身英语|为什么说谎难被发现

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

Why it's hard to spot a liar 为什么我们很难发现说谎者? Squirming in their seat, glancing around the room and never looking you in the eye. 在座位上蠕动,环视房间,却从不看你的眼睛。 We think we know when someone is lying to us, but do we really? 我们认为我们知道什么时候有人在对我们撒谎,但我们真的知道吗? A study published in the Personality and Social Psychology Review showed that people's ability to tell if someone is lying to them is little better than 50%. 发表在《人格与社会心理学评论》上的一项研究表明,人们判断某人是否对他们撒谎的能力仅略高于 50%。 Interestingly, other research suggests that we are actually quite good at unconsciously spotting liars, but our conscious thoughts overrule this. 有趣的是,其他研究表明,我们实际上很擅长无意识地识别说谎者,但我们的有意识思维却推翻了这一点。 Forensic Scientist R. Edward Geiselman points out that training in recognising liars doesn't always help, saying 'quick, inadequate training sessions lead people to over-analyse and to do worse than if they go with their gut reactions". 法医科学家 R. Edward Geiselman 指出,识别说谎者的培训并不总是有帮助,他说,“快速、不充分的培训课程会导致人们过度分析,结果比跟随直觉反应更糟糕”。 One reason for this may be 'truth bias'. 造成这种情况的原因之一可能是“真相偏见”。 Experts have suggested that we are usually biased to believe that people are telling us the truth, at least in most contexts. 专家表示,我们通常会偏向于相信人们告诉我们的是事实,至少在大多数情况下是这样。 Another reason that might make us bad at identifying liars is that there are a number of myths around body language and lying, 另一个可能让我们不擅长识别说谎者的原因是,关于肢体语言和谎言存在着许多误区。 Many of us believe that liars are unlikely to look us in the eye or will fidget in their seat. 我们中的许多人都认为,说谎者不太可能直视我们的眼睛,也不会在座位上坐立不安。 However, this isn't necessarily the case. 然而,情况并非一定如此。 Professor of psychology Kevin Colwell suggests that liars often work hard to disguise these behaviours. 心理学教授凯文·科尔韦尔表示,说谎者常常努力掩饰这些行为。 It may be that not looking away, or sitting more still than usual, are actually the giveaways that someone is not telling the truth. 没有移开视线,或者比平时更安静地坐着,实际上可能表明某人没有说实话。 To see how someone's behaviour really changes as they lie, many experts recommend observing people talking about things known to be true. 为了了解某人在撒谎时行为有何变化,许多专家建议观察人们谈论已知的真实事情。 This allows us to establish a baseline of their normal behaviours while speaking. 这使我们能够建立他们说话时正常行为的基线。 Any differences to this baseline behaviour could show that someone is lying. 与此基线行为的任何差异都可能表明有人在撒谎。 This is why it's much harder to lie to people who know us well. 这就是为什么对熟悉我们的人撒谎要困难得多。 As liars may be working hard to conceal their behaviours, some psychologists have suggested increasing the effort needed for this by asking them to tell their story backwards. 由于说谎者可能会努力隐藏自己的行为,一些心理学家建议通过要求他们倒着讲述自己的故事来加大这方面的努力。 When faced with this increased cognitive load, any behavioural tell-tale signsare magnified. 当面对这种增加的认知负荷时,任何行为迹象都会被放大。 It can be hard to spot liars. 很难发现说谎者。 We are likely to trust people, and behaviours can be hidden, but if we know someone well, and if someone is working too hard to stick to their story, it's possible to see through people who are not telling the truth. 我们可能会信任别人,行为也可能会被隐藏,但如果我们很了解某人,并且如果某人非常努力地坚持自己的故事,就有可能识破那些没有说实话的人。 词汇表 squirm扭来扭去 glance 扫视 look someone in the eye 直视某人的眼睛,与某人坦诚相视 unconsciously 无意识地 spot 看出,发现 conscious 有意识的 over-analyse 过度分析 gut reaction 直觉,本能反应 truth bias “取真偏好”,人们更倾向于相信他人所言为真的现象 biased 偏向的,倾向于 fidget 动来动去 disguise 掩饰 giveaway 让(某人)露马脚的事情 behaviour 行为 establish 确立,建立 baseline 基准,基线 conceal 隐藏,掩盖 cognitive load 认知负荷 behavioural 行为上的 tell-tale sign 暴露隐藏行为的迹象,端倪 stick to 坚持 see through 看穿,识破 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

2分钟
99+
1年前

经济学人|本周商业要闻

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

The world this week--Business The top ranks of Boeing's management were overhauled amid investor unease about safety checks on its airliners. 本周国际要闻--商业由于投资者对波音飞机的安全检查感到不安,波音公司的最高管理层进行了全面调整。 In January a panel fell from a 737 Max 9 passenger jet soon after take-off. 今年1月,一架737 Max 9型客机起飞后不久,一块面板从飞机上掉了下来。 Several incidents have been reported since then, including a 777 that lost a landing-gear tyre when it was taking off. 自这起事故后,又报道了几起事故,其中包括一架777型客机在起飞时掉落了一个起落架上的轮胎。 Boeing safety has become a meme on TikTok. 波音飞机的安全问题已经成为TikTok上的一个热梗。 Dave Calhoun is to step down as chief executive by the end of the year and Larry Kellner departs as chairman. 戴夫·卡尔霍恩将于今年年底卸任首席执行官一职,拉里·凯尔纳也会卸任董事长一职。 The head of the commercial-aircraft division has been replaced with immediate effect. 商用飞机部门的负责人已被撤换,立即生效。 America's Justice Department lodged an antitrust lawsuit against Apple, accusing the tech giant of making it harder for customers to switch phones, undermining innovation in apps, and imposing "extraordinary costs" on developers, businesses and consumers. 美国司法部对苹果公司提起反垄断诉讼,指控这家科技巨头加大了用户更换手机的难 度,破坏了应用程序的创新,并给开发商、企业和消费者带来了“巨大的成本”。 The complaint in effect attempts to stop Apple locking users into its ecosystem. 这项投诉实际上是试图阻止苹果将用户锁定在其生态系统中。 Apple said the suit "threatens who we are" as a company and sets "a dangerous precedent, empowering government to take a heavy hand in designing people's technology". 苹果表示,这起诉讼"威胁到了我们”作为一家公司的身份,并开创了“一个危险的先例,授权政府在设计人们的技术方面采取强硬施”。 The case will take years to wind its way through the courts. 这个案子要经过数年的法庭审理才能结束。 Meanwhile, the European Union opened investigations into Alphabet and Apple over competition practices at their app stores, and Meta over its use of personal information in advertising. 与此同时,欧盟开始调查Alphabet和苹果在其应用商店的竞争行为,以及Meta在广告中使用个人信息的行为。 It is the first official scrutiny of tech companies under the EU's new Digital Markets Act. 这是欧盟根据新出台的《数字市场法》对科技公司进行的首次官方审查。 Had the issues been resolved with the companies by "mere discussion, they would have been solved by now", said the EU's antitrust commissioner. 欧盟反垄断专员表示,如果这些问题“仅仅通过讨论就能解决”,那么这些问题早就解决了。 Alibaba abandoned a planned IPO for its logistics division, instead offering to buy out minority shareholders in the business. 阿里巴巴放弃了物流部门的首次公开募股计划,转而提出买断该业务少数股东的股份。 A year ago the Chinese tech giant announced its intention to split into six parts, with the potential for each to pursue a stockmarket listing. But the plan hasn't excited investors. 一年前,这家中国科技巨头宣布,计划将业务分拆为六部分,每个部分都有可能寻求上市。但该计划并没有让投资者感到兴奋。 Late last year Alibaba decided not to spin off its cloud unit and suspended the IPO of its supermarket arm. 去年年底,阿里巴巴决定暂不剥离云业务,并暂停了超市业务的首次公开募股。 Reddit's share price held on to most of the gains reaped from its successful flotation on the New York Stock Exchange. Reddit的股价守住了其在纽约证券交易所成功发行股份所获得的大部分涨幅。 The social-media platform's stock soared by 48% on the first day of trading. 这个社交媒体平台的股票在交易首日飙升了48%。 The yen fell to a 34-year low against the dollar, triggering warnings from Japanese officials that they might intervene in the currency markets. 日元兑美元汇率跌至34年来的最低点,引发日本官员可能会干预外汇市场的警告。 The Bank of Japan raised interest rates recently for the first time since 2007, which would normally cause the yen to strengthen, but its monetary policy remains comparatively loose. 日本央行近期加息,是2007年以来的首次,这通常会导致日元走强,但其货币政策仍相对宽松。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

3分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Ideas|如何辨别职场霸凌

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

I found myself dreading going into work. As soon as I saw the door, it was like this weight just went onto me. Inside, it was eating me up. I was smiling all the time, but it hurt, It's taken somewhere in the region of six years to be able to really regain my cofidence and get myself back to my former self. 'You lose part of your own identity when you go through this. Around 1/3 of people in the UK have experienced workplace bullying. In nearly 3/4 of cases, the bullying is carried out by a manager... How would you define bullying? So, bullying to one person may mean something completely different to the next person. It is quite subjective and it can be hard to define, or even to recognise when it's happening. What may seem trivial, such as just excluding someone from the coffee run every morning, over time, that creates a really oppressive working environment. And then you get the more extreme cases where there's verbal, maybe even physical behaviour. Sometimes people are permanently disabled with their mental health and they can never work again. Sadly, we have lots of clients who suffer with suicidal thoughts. What's not bullying?... Sometimes people will speak up and say that something is bullying when actually they're really just being managed - there's a performance issue. Assuming it's a reasonable request from your manager, then that is not workplace bullying, But for the most part, if somebody feels as though they're being bullied, that's the important thing. What does bullying feel like?... 'Ive worked at a restaurant where people used to sing the EDL song. "If you're not white, get out." Straight away, you know, they find out you're a Muslim:"You're a suicide bomber, you're a terrorist.""What's he got on his back?" I'm proud to be who I am, you know, proud to be a Muslim. I'm proud, you know, that I pray, I just want to get accepted like.everyone else. You know, not be judged due to colour, due to height or anything, just go to work and just have a peaceful day at work. I witnessed people in positions of power just yelling at co-workers in front of other people, demeaning them, making sexual comments. When the envitonment is like that at the top level, it really does trickle down to every facet of the workplace. Like, I actually found myself becoming a bit toxic as well. I had a bit of a mental breakdown, 我有点精神崩溃了。 I think bullying can be so detrimental and can be so sinister because it can be just even those little comments that are meant to chip away at your self-esteem and your self-worth, and I think that's where it starts to get really dangerous. I was bullied at work myself, and it went on for about two years before I actually felt able to do anything about it. After seeking colleagues' advice and even addressing her bully, Nicki went through formal processes unsuccessfully, then an appeal... And ultimately, I had to walk away because my health suffered so enormously as a result. The pressure, the strain, the extra mental health issues that I suffered really escalated during that formal process. What can you do if you feel you're being bullied?... 'It's trying to speak to somebody in confidence, preferably somebody senior, This could be a manager, your HR department; a trade union representative; the ACAS helpline... Make sure that those conversations happen early on about which behaviours are acceptable and which are not. If that doesn't work, you can make a formal complaint... There's usually a formal grievance policy that you can follow to escalate your concerns and have them investigated, but sometimes that might not be the right option for the employee, in terms of their health. You've got to put your health first, and only you know what's best for your health. Don't be afraid to walk away if that is the best thing for you. Keep a diary, keep a log of events, because if you do need to seek some legal advice, then that's really helpful. Written notes could include bullying-related feelings; dates and times; evidence e.g. emails/screenshots; any witnesses... Can the law protect you?... Bullying doesn't have a legal definition, which means it's very difficult to bring a case unless you do have a psychiatric injury, whereas harassment cases can be brought under the Equality Act. The Equality Act 2010 is a law which protects people from discrimination related to certain personal characteristics. These include race, religion, age, sex, disabilty, sexual orientation, etc... A legal definition would really help with those employers who are not prepared to take the action internally, and it would give a little bit more protection for people who want to be able to bring a case. Because it is so subjective, I think the courts have struggled to want to define it really strictly. There's a grey area where there's lots of people being subjected to bullying that they have nowhere to go, and the law doesn't support them. ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

6分钟
99+
1年前

六分钟英语|用缝纫来对抗月经贫困

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

Menstruation is an issue that's not often talked about, yet every month it affects billions of women around the world. 月经是一个不经常谈及的问题,但每个月它都会影响世界上数十亿女性。 Menstruation, or periods, are a natural process that typically happen once a month when women and girls bleed from their vagina for a few days as part of the reproductive cycle. 月经是每月发生一次的一个自然过程,妇女和女孩的阴道会流血几天作为生殖周期的一部分。 When this happens, women need special products like sanitary pads or tampons to manage the flow of blood and go about their day-to-day life. 当这种情况发生时,女性需要特殊的产品,如卫生巾或卫生棉条来控制经血流动,并进行日常生活。 Unfortunately, over 500 million people around the world either don't have access to these products or can't afford to buy them, and this is called period poverty. Period poverty has serious consequences, for example, girls on their periods not going to school affects their education, and women who can't work during their period have less income. What's more, it can cause health problems because, without sanitary products, its easy to get infections. In this programme, we'll be learning about one project fighting period poverty affecting thousands of women refugees. And, of course, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well. But first, Georgie, I have a question for you. Periods affect girls and women of reproductive age, that's roughly half the female population, or 26% of the global population. But how many people is that? Is it: a) 2.1 billion people, b) 2.3 billion people or, c) 2.5 billion people? I'll guess it's about 2.1 billion people. OK, Georgie, I'll reveal the answer at the end of the programme. Ella Lambert was a student at Bristol University when she started The Pachamama Project in 2020 during the first Covid lockdown. She'd heard about period poverty and decided to put her lockdown time to good use by making sanitary pads, pieces of soft material used to absorb menstrual blood. Here's Ella explaining how her project got started to BBC World Service programme,'People Fixing the World': So I borrowed a sewing machine from a friend, I learned how to sew on YouTube, and then I just started making pads, And even now to this day, I can't sew anything else, only pads. Ella started making reusable sanitary pads which aren't a new thing. They're made from absorbent fabrics such as fleece and cotton sheets which means that they can be used over and over again after they're washed unlike disposable pads. Ella spent lockdown learning how to sew, how to join pieces of material by hand using a needle and thread, or with a sewing machine. In fact, Ella was so focused on sewing sanitary pads she didn't make anything else, and to this day, pads are the only thing she knows how to sew. Ella uses the phrase, to this day, to say: up to and including the present moment. Sanitary pads aren't easy to make. The outer layer has to be soft because it touches the skin, but they also need to be absorbent, able to soak up liquids like blood and hold them. What's more, Ella designed her pads to be washed and used again, unlike most sanitary pads bought in shops which are disposable, designed to be thrown away after they've been used. Ella's network of volunteers sewing reusable sanitary pads grew, and to date the Pachamama Project has donated tens of thousands of period products to refugees fleeing confict in Syria, Turkey and Lebanon, as well as women here in the UK. Plus, the project is helping in other ways too. Despite affecting so many people, and being necessary for life itself, many cultures consider menstruation unclean or shameful, not a topic of polite conversation. But Eilla thinks her project is giving refugees the confidence to talk about periods, as she told BBC World Service's, People Fixing the World: I have seen such major change in such a short short period of time, Like, the women originally who were distributing the pads would barely evenspeak about it and we had it behind a curtain, and now they'll chat away about the pads with their male colleagues, anyone that comes into the shop... Before, most women refugees would barely talk about menstruation, they would only just, scarcely talk about it. But now they're happily chatting away, passing the time talking to otherwomen, and even to male colleagues. I think it's time I reveal the answer to my question- as a number, how many women make up the 26% of the world's population who menstruate? I said it was 2.1 billion people... Which was... the correct answer. OK, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned in this programme starting with the verb to sew, to join material together using a needle and thread, either by hand or with a sewing machine. The phrase, to this day, means up to and including the present moment. absorbent means able to soak up and hold liquid, and the adjective disposable means designed to be thrown away after use. barely do something, you only just do it, by the smallest amount. to chat away means to pass the time by talking a lot with someone. ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

5分钟
1k+
1年前

BBC Newsround|为什么预约牙医这么难

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

We all know that regular trips to the dentist are an important part of looking after our teeth. 我们都知道,定期去看牙医是保护牙齿的重要组成部分。 At the moment, there aren't enough dentists who can treat children for free on the NHS. 目前,没有足够的牙医可以在NHS上免费治疗儿童。 That means some children are going months or even years without their teeth being checked. 这意味着有些孩子几个月甚至几年都没有检查他们的牙齿。 A new survey has found that depending on where you live, anywhere between 12 and 42% of children could have signs of tooth decay. 一项新的调查发现,根据居住地的不同,12%到 42%的儿童可能有蛀牙迹象。 Okay, hands up if you've been to the dentist this year. 好的,如果你今年看过牙医,请举手。 And last year? 去年呢? Have your parents ever struggled to get you a dentist appointment? 您的父母是否曾为让您预约牙医而费尽心思? Yes, my mum has found it very difficult to find me a dentist appointment because it's usually very busy. 是的,我妈妈发现给我预约牙医非常困难,因为通常都很忙。 Is there anything you'd like to see change about dentists? 您希望看到牙医有什么改变吗? I would like the government to put more dentist shops around the streets so people wont be waiting in line for a long period of time. 我希望政府在街道上开设更多的牙医店,这样人们就不会长时间排队等候。 While these kids have been able to see a dentist, many families are struggling to get appointments on the NHS. 虽然这些孩子已经能够去看牙医,但许多家庭却很难在国民医疗服务体系(NHS)上预药。 This is John Mill, the president of the British Dental Association, who look after dentists across the country. 我是约翰·米尔,英国牙科协会主席,负责照顾全国各地的牙医。 Some new research has come out that says that in some parts of the country, levels of tooth decay in children are up to 42%, which is almost half. 一些新的研究表明,在该国的一些地区,儿童蛀牙的比例高达42%,几乎是一半。 So that's really high. 所以这确实很高。 How has that happened? 这是怎么发生的? It is sad, and it's also really sad in the modern society that we live in, that so many children are getting tooth decay. 令人悲伤的是,在我们生活的现代社会中,如此多的孩子正在蛀牙,这也是非常令人悲伤的。 But the answer is that there's more tooth decay in places where communities are poor, where there's less money, where the cost of living crisis is beginning to bite. 但答案是,在社区贫困、钱少、生活成本危机开始蔓延的地方,蛀牙现象更多。 It can be really difficult to get a dentist appointment. 预约牙医真的很困难。 I'm afraid the key reason is that the NHS in particular only funds the provision of dental care, NHS dental care, for about half the population and it's been like that for many, many years. 恐怕关键原因是 NHS 只为大约一半人口提供牙科护理、NHS 牙科护理提供资金,而且这种情况已经很多很多年了。 Can you just imagine how it would be if only 50% of the population could see a doctor when you needed to? 您能想象一下,如果只有 50%的人口可以在您需要时去看医生,那会怎样? We simply don't fund enough dentists to do the job. 我们根本没有资助足够的牙医来完成这项工作。 To find out more, I've come to meet Andrea Ledsom. 为了了解更多信息,我来见安德里亚·莱德索姆(Andrea Ledsom)。 She's the minister in charge of public health, including teeth, for England. 她是英格兰负责公共卫生(包括牙齿)的部长。 So last year, only half of children in England saw an NHS dentist. 因此,去年,英国只有一半的儿童去看了国民保健服务(NHS)牙医。 Absolutely not good enough. 绝对不够好。 So what we're doing is we're announcing some extra ways to get more dentists to see children so that they can actually go and get a check-up. 因此,我们正在做的是宣布一些额外的方法,让更多的牙医去看孩子,这样他们就可以真正去做检查。 So what's the actual cause of this problem? 那么造成这个问题的真正原因是什么呢? Because the number of children going to the dentist has been dropping for a long time. 因为去看牙医的儿童数量长期以来一直在下降。 What's behind it? 背后是什么? Well, what's essential is that mums and dads take their children to the dentist, number one. 嗯,最重要的是爸爸妈妈带孩子去看牙医,这是第一。 Number two, there's got to be enough dentists for parents to take their children to see. 第二,必须有足够的牙医,供父母带孩子去看牙医。 And that has been a problem. 这一直是个问题。 Both of those things have been an issue for a long, long time. 这两件事长期以来一直是一个问题。 There's going to be extra money available for every dentist who sees a patient under the NHS who's not been able to get a dentist for the last two years and that's going to provide two and a half million more appointments which is really good news. 对于过去两年无法在 NHS 下看牙医的患者,每一位牙医都会获得额外的资金,这将提供额外的 250 万个预约,这确实是个好消息。 We're also increasing the work that dental therapists can do so that they'll be able to support dentists by going into family hubs and into nurseries and into schools. 我们还增加了牙科治疗师可以做的工作,以便他们能够通过进入家庭中心、托儿所和学校来支持牙医。 So speaking of check-ups and dentists, can you say that every child who wants a free NHS check-up will get one? 所以说到检查和牙医,你能说每个想要免费NHS检查的孩子都会得到一个吗? That's what we're working towards. 这就是我们正在努力的方向。 We want everybody who needs an NHS dentist to be able to get one. 我们希望每个需要 NHS 牙医的人都能得到一位牙医。 And whether it's a dentist or a dental therapist doing the check-up and teaching you how to brush your teeth well etc, these will all help to get children to have much better oral health as we call it, which basically means no toothache and a lovely smile for life. 而且无论是牙医还是牙科治疗师做检查、教你如何好好刷牙等等,这些都将有助于让孩子拥有更好的口腔健康,我们称之为口腔健康,这基本上意味着没有牙痛,也没有牙痛。一生可爱的微笑。 If you're worried about your teeth and don't have a dentist, both John and Andrea suggest you ask your parent or guardian to ring NHS 111 for advice. 如果您担心自己的牙齿并且没有牙医,约翰和安德里亚都建议您让您的父母或监护人。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

3分钟
99+
1年前

BBC Newsround|为什么未经处理的污水会进入我们的水源

英音听力|BBC & 经济学人等

A record amount of sewage was spilled into England's rivers and seas by water companies last year. 去年,自来水公司向英格兰河流和海洋排放的污水量创下了纪录。 But why is raw sewage allowed into our water in the first place? 但为什么首先允许未经处理的污水进入我们的水中呢? Here's more. 还有更多。 We all contribute to raw sewage. 我们都对未经处理的污水做出了贡献。 It's what runs down our plug holes and flush down our toilets. 它会流进我们的塞孔并冲进我们的厕所。 This sewage travels through a series of pipes and tunnels before arriving at a treatment works. 这些污水在到达处理厂之前会经过一系列管道和隧道。 At treatment works, this dirty water is cleaned before it's released back into waterways like rivers. 在处理厂,这些脏水在被排放回河流等水道之前会被净化。 But sometimes water companies are allowed to release raw sewage back into the environment without it being cleaned. 但有时自来水公司被允许将未净化的污水排放回环境中。 This can happen during long periods of heavy rain. 这种情况可能发生在长时间的大雨期间。 This can help to protect houses and other properties from flooding and stop sewage rising back up into people's homes and onto the streets. 这可以帮助保护房屋和其他财产免受洪水侵袭,并阻止污水回流到人们的家中和街道上。 But the issue is, raw sewage can contain rubbish, as well as viruses and bacteria 但问题是,未经处理的污水可能含有垃圾以及病毒和细菌 That can be harmful to humans, animals and plant life. 这可能对人类、动物和植物有害。 The Environment Agency, who regulate how much sewage that water companies are allowed to put in the water, found that sewage was spilled for 3.6 million hours into rivers and seas in England last year. 负责监管自来水公司向水中排放多少污水的环境署发现,去年英国污水流入河流和海洋的时间长达 360 万小时。 That's more than double the amount from 2022. 与 2022 年相比,这一数字增加了一倍多。 Water UK, who represent water and sewage companies, says it's unacceptable, but they think the levels are due to more rain than usual. 代表供水和污水处理公司的英国水务公司表示,这是不可接受的,但他们认为水位升高是由于降雨量比平时更多。 But the Environment Agency says water companies still have a legal responsibility to manage serious overflows, despite the wet weather. 但环境局表示,尽管天气潮湿,自来水公司仍然有法律责任来管理严重的溢流。 ✔更多文本内容见公众号【琐简英语】,回复“1”,进入【打卡交流群】

1分钟
99+
1年前

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