2022年托业考试听力练习资料集锦.docx
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1、2022年托业考试听力练习资料集锦 大家在备考托业听力的时候可以多多参考一些听力练习材料,了解一下考试内容,下面我给大家带来2022年托业考试听力练习资料集锦,希望喜爱。 2022年托业考试听力练习资料1 DAVID GREENE, HOST: When you watch a presidential debate, it's easy to think that the nation is deeply divided over economic policy. But when you talk to the experts, to economists, turns out t
2、hey agree on an enormous number of issues. Our Planet Money team wondered what it would sound like if you could take some of those academic ideas about the economy and put them in a candidate's mouth. NPR's Robert Smith finds out. ROBERT SMITH, BYLINE: To create a dream candidate, you need a
3、 dream team. We took five leading economists of all different stripes - conservative, liberal. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: You could probably describe me as left of center, to be fair. LUIS ZINGALES: Pro-market but not necessarily pro-business. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: I'm a pretty hardcore free market guy
4、. KATHERINE BAICKER: I'm a professor of health economics at the Harvard School of Public Health. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #3: I think of myself as a radical pragmatist. SMITH: And we said to this team, put all your differences aside and tell us what can you actually agree on. In an ideal world, what sho
5、uld the presidential candidates be talking about? Luigi Zingales from the University of Chicago Booth School started off with something pretty uncontroversial - the United States tax code is a disaster. ZINGALES: All the loopholes and differences and in particular deductions. SMITH: Now, politicians
6、 say this all the time and they rarely give a solution. But our economists all agree on a pretty good way to fix it. The United States, they all said, needs to get rid of a giant tax deduction that unfortunately millions of Americans love and enjoy. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #4: The mortgage interest deducti
7、on. BAICKER: The mortgage interest deduction. ZINGALES: Mortgage interest is extremely perverse. SMITH: If you own a home, pay a mortgage, you can write off the interest on your taxes. And if you're one of the lucky ones, it's awesome. A little help from Uncle Sam to live the American dream.
8、 But to an economist, a tax break is a multibillion dollar gift to a very particular group, in this case a group that doesn't always need the money. Here's Dean Baker. He's a liberal with the Center for Economic and Policy Research, and a conservative, Luigi Zingales. DEAN BAKER: It just
9、 makes no sense that, you know, if we have Bill Gates or whoever, some very wealthy person, we're subsidizing them to get an expensive home. ZINGALES: So because rich people receive a much larger subsidy, the price of houses increases so much it actually makes it less affordable for the poorer p
10、eople. SMITH: If you totally eliminate this deduction, the U.S. government would have an extra $100 billion a year to pay down the deficit or maybe lower overall taxes. Why wouldn't a politician at least float the idea? Well we wanted to see how it would sound so we hired an actor. We wrote him
11、a stump speech and put him in front of a fake audience. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #5: That's why when I'm elected president of the United States, I have a special plan for the middle class. All of you Americans who own your own homes, I promise to raise your tax bill by thousands of dollars a year. B
12、AICKER: And that's why no one elects economists. SMITH: Katherine Baicker from Harvard says as painful and as unpopular as eliminating deductions would be, there is an upside. The system would be more fair and it would bring in all this extra revenue to the government. So I asked the panel, any
13、chance with all that extra money you could maybe lower some tax rates too? Well, our economists did agree on one tax that has to go. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #5: Read my lips, no taxes for corporations. Zero, nada, nothing. SMITH: This is not going to go over well with the middle class either. Right now Pre
14、sident Obama and Mitt Romney are advocating lower corporate taxes, but no one said get rid of them altogether. But our conservative and liberal economists agree, in principle at least. Here's Dean Baker. BAKER: We don't want to prevent Microsoft or General Motors or whoever it might be from
15、investing more and improving their product line. That's a good thing in my view. SMITH: Our economists said that if you want to tax rich people as part of public policy, tax rich people, tax the owners of the corporation, but don't tax the profits from the corporation that are reinvested and
16、 creating jobs. Now, before you think that our economic dream team has nothing but unpopular ideas, there is more to the plan. Later today on ALL THINGS CONSIDERED, our economists say there might just be a way to get rid of income taxes altogether and they unveil their big plan to combat illegal dru
17、gs. UNIDENTIFIED MAN #6: Make them legal. SMITH: And other economic wisdom you won't hear in the debates. Robert Smith, NPR News, New York. 2022年托业考试听力练习资料2 The U.S. presidential election is approaching, and political parties and advocacy groups across the nation are making a final push to get p
18、eople registered to vote and to the polls for the November 6th contest. Groups are mobilizing to get an underrepresented group of eligible voters involved in the process. Shakei Haynes is helping college students register to vote in the November election. He's been doing this since 2005 when he
19、was 16-years-old. Now he's a political science student at Howard University in Washington. He says the job is getting easier. "Mobilizing individuals to get registered to vote has not been hard at all because people understand the urgency. In this election, you have two different contrastin
20、g views of what America should look like over the next four years," said Haynes. Some of these young African-American students will be first-time voters. Nearly half of the seven million African Americans ages 18 to 30 were unregistered and therefore not eligible to vote, according to the 2022
21、U.S. Census. Shakei says that is unacceptable and young people, especially minorities, should not be underrepresented in the political process. "A democracy should be reflective of the people who are in it. If we can, you know, make that process a little easier for students then that is our job
22、, and that is the reward at the end of the day," he said. Howard student Jai Dungey is from New Jersey. She says everyone should know their vote matters. "Voting is a right, it is a right. People need to realize that it is not a privilege. We should come together and just take advantage of
23、 this right we have been given and people have worked so hard to give us," said Dungey. Corion Jones is voting for the first time. He's from the battleground state of Ohio. He feels his vote could help determine the outcome of the election. "Everyone should be able to express what they
24、 want or what they feel in their own country, so the opportunity and the ability to vote is highly important," said Jones. "Just encourage sort of those last few remaining folks we are trying to reach," said Gail Kitch. Gail Kitch is chief operating officer with the non-partisan Voter
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