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Emerson
04-21-2005, 03:35 PM
Помогите украинскому иммигранту , кто чем может . Вспомните свои студенчиские годы ... вспомнили ? прониклись комне любовью и пониманием ? А если серьёзно то для меня это реальный напряг ... ну к делу :

Choose a business related from newspaper ... or the internet . Read the article and write a page or more summarizing the article .

Examples of the business related articles :
1. Change in mortgage interest rate affects the housing market.
2.Will the economy slow down in year 2005 .
3.Auditing financial statments and providing consulting services by the same CPA firm.
4.Best and worst performer companies in year 2004 .


Внимане вопрос (ц) Я так понял мне надо найти статью , прочитать ее и написать свои каментарии ? Помогите найти в нэте такую статью ... желательно с неочень закавыристым текстом ... напишите свой каментарий к ней ... и я по прочтению тоже с вами поговрю , что б раставить все точки над Й ...

людям с добрым серцем ,откликнувшимся, земной поклон

Olezhik
04-21-2005, 04:46 PM
http://forum.russianamerica.com/f/showthread.php?t=11069

Фома
04-21-2005, 05:26 PM
Ну вот, например:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Change+in+mortgage+interest+rate+affects+the+hou sing+market.+&btnG=Google+Search
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Will+the+economy+slow+down+in+year+2005+&btnG=Google+Search
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Auditing+financial+statements+and+providing+cons ulting+services+by+the+same+CPA+firm&spell=1
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=Best+and+worst+performer+companies+in+year++2004&btnG=Search


Еще?

Emerson
04-22-2005, 01:31 PM
Спасибо ... я на выходных как засяду , как перечитаю все это ... и потом если что не пойму задам вам вопросы ...вообщем после выходных

Emerson
05-10-2005, 06:15 PM
Emerson
Accounting 1A
Writing Assignments
5/10/2005
Will the economy slow down in year 2005
U.S. economic growth slowed sharply in the first three months of the year, to the weakest pace in two years, as surging energy costs caused consumers and businesses to rein in their spending.The nation's gross domestic product, which is the value of all goods and services produced, rose at a 3.1 percent annual rate during the first quarter, down from a 3.8 percent rate in the final three months of last year, the Commerce Department said yesterday.
The news confirmed other recent signs of a cooling economy. Job growth, retail sales, factory production and consumer confidence fell in March. New orders for big-ticket manufactured goods have declined in each of the past three months. The trade deficit keeps growing to new monthly records.
Many analysts were surprised the economy had slowed so quickly after expanding 4.4 percent last year, but they said the nation is not headed back into recession -- as long as energy prices don't go higher.
"I think we have to get used to slower growth numbers," said Nigel Gault, U.S. economist at Global Insight Inc., an economic research and forecasting firm.
But several Fed officials believe inflation is contained for now and that energy prices are likely to fall in coming months. If they are right, and growth remains subdued, they may consider leaving rates unchanged at their June meeting.
That is a reversal of how some Fed officials and many analysts were thinking in mid-March, when they believed the economy was growing faster, inflation pressures were building and the odds seemed to be increasing that the central bank would raise its rate by a half percentage point, to 3.5 percent, in June.
"With consumption suffering from the strength of gasoline prices and investment apparently stalling, too, the chances are rising that the Fed will need to change course and stop raising rates," said Paul Ashworth, senior international economist with Capital Economics Ltd., a financial consultancy. "However, for the moment, we expect it to continue raising rates at a measured pace for the next couple of meetings."
The economy has slowed after two years in which growth was boosted by government stimulus -- in the form of tax cuts and low interest rates -- provided in response to extraordinary turmoil.
The Fed cut its benchmark rate dramatically, from 6.5 percent in late 2000 to 1 percent by June 2003, to support the economy through a succession of shocks, including the bursting of the late 1990s investment bubble, the 2001 recession, the terrorist attacks that year, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and corporate scandals.
The White House and Congress also passed several tax cuts during that time, spurring additional household spending. Policymakers had expected that consumers would keep the economy going at a decent pace until businesses eventually rejoined the game and started investing, expanding and hiring again with some gusto.
That last piece of the recovery seemed to be falling into place late last year, when business spending on nonresidential structures, equipment and software rose at double-digit rates. Economists had hoped that would continue into the new year, even after the end-of-December expiration of a tax break designed to boost investment, providing plenty of fuel for economic growth even as consumers grew winded.
Meanwhile, consumers also pulled back, finding their wallets pinched by gasoline prices above $2 a gallon, lagging wage growth and rising interest rates. Consumer spending rose at a 3.5 percent annual rate in the January-through-March period, down from a 4.2 percent pace in the October-through-December quarter.
"Consumer spending is still pretty good," Global Insight's Gault said. "But there's not enough strength on the other side. The biggest disappointment in [the GDP report] is on the business investment side."
Government spending in the quarter slowed as well, rising at a 0.6 percent rate in the past three months after increasing at a 0.9 percent annual rate in the previous quarter.
On top of that, a growing share of American consumer and business demand is being satisfied by goods and services from overseas, sapping U.S. economic growth. The trade gap widened as imports grew more than twice as fast as exports in the first quarter.
One bright spot was the booming housing industry, still propelled by historically low mortgage rates. Residential investment rose at a 5.7 percent annual rate in the last quarter, up from a 3.4 percent pace in the previous quarter.
Many economists have now lowered their forecasts of growth for this year to about 3 percent from closer to 4 percent, noting that business inventories are high, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. have announced plans to cut production and interest rates are headed higher.
The first quarter's 3.1 percent growth rate is equal to the nation's quarterly average for the past two decades, and "isn't a bad thing," said Richard Yamarone, director of economic research for Argus Research Corp.
Others disagreed. Growth at 3 percent "is slow" for this country and will create "huge challenges for our society," said John Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia Securities, who said that pace will not generate the tax revenue or job growth that the nation expects. "It's below what we've budgeted for fiscal policy. It's below our expectations for the job market."

Emerson
05-10-2005, 06:16 PM
ужос правда ? специальность такая .
пойду здавать щас в колледж . хотьбы прокатило