时间:2019-01-11 作者:英语课 分类:VOA慢速英语2008年(二)月


英语课

This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.


 
A woman in Zambia with a bag of corn from the international aid group CARE
The United States provides more than half the world's food assistance. American programs totaled close to two billion dollars last year.


But critics say the current system wastes money and delays the arrival of needed food.


Under current law, United States government agencies have to buy American-produced food. And seventy-five percent of the aid must be carried on American ships.


President Bush wants to change the system. His proposal would provide food assistance by purchasing crops directly from farmers in the developing world. Money in the form of cash grants would supply about twenty-five percent of food aid.


President Bush, in his State of the Union speech last month, called on Congress to support the proposal. He said it would build up local agriculture and, in his words, "help break the cycle of famine."


Last year, Congress' Government Accountability Office reported that sixty-five percent of the money for food aid was going to costs besides food. It said rising business and transportation costs had cut the average amount of food shipped over the last five years by fifty-two percent. Yet demand has grown.


Critics among charity groups have called for changes in the system. CARE USA, a major aid group, said last year that it would not take part in the current system after two thousand nine.


But the system also has supporters among agricultural, shipping 1 and charity groups, and lawmakers in Congress. Supporters say the current system works well and that changing it could harm food aid programs. 


The continuing debate over the most effective ways to provide food aid is not the only agriculture-related issue in Washington. Congress has been working for months on a major farm bill.


The House of Representatives and the Senate passed similar versions of legislation last year. President Bush says he may veto the final bill that reaches him. He says it would cost too much in its present form. He wants to end subsidy 2 payments to farmers who earn a lot for their crops.


The president has a new agriculture secretary to deal with these issues. Former North Dakota governor Ed Schafer was sworn into office in late January. He replaced Mike Johanns, who resigned to run for the United States Senate from Nebraska.


And that’s the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. I’m Doug Johnson.


 



n.船运(发货,运输,乘船)
  • We struck a bargain with an American shipping firm.我们和一家美国船运公司谈成了一笔生意。
  • There's a shipping charge of £5 added to the price.价格之外另加五英镑运输费。
n.补助金,津贴
  • The university will receive a subsidy for research in artificial intelligence.那个大学将得到一笔人工智能研究的补助费。
  • The living subsidy for senior expert's family is included in the remuneration.报酬已包含高级专家家人的生活补贴。
标签: voa 慢速英语
学英语单词
a stem
a writ of privilege
agricultural leases tribunal
aheadness
albertite
ambulancier
antenna tracking system
antidiarrheica
autografts
average thermal neutron cross-section
bastard merogony
beam and scales
benfer
black bindweeds
Bloumet
boat painter
borough-reeve
Braun anastomosis
cementhead
Chkalovsk
class costing
coke(-oven) gas
come all the way from
contact by friction
dab on
daynard
demonstation
desactivation
diable
district school
dramatizing
Egyptology
embark for
ethylether
f(o)etal dystocia
failure ratio
Figueira
foreign body in mediastinum
Free Exercise Clause
fresh-water drilling fluid
gallium fets
glycanase
gooseskins
Hypertussis
Internal committees
Italo-
Jeantaud steering
kolodny
lazy eights
leucoplasts
level tree
Lilium huidongense
longitudinally welded clad(ding) tube
low pressure receiver
Maktoob
man machine language
Mensheviks
microphysiometry
minus-strand
multipurpose message processor
musculus thyreohyoideus
Noak Hill
noritake
notch of pancreas
offshore trade transactions
oh mother
owner's risk rate
Pedicularis cheilanthifolia
perfectioners
permo
phagolysosomes
polistes (gyrostoma) gigas
porcelain enameling sheet
public infrastructure
punchdrunk encephalopathy, punchdrunk syndrome
quad latch
rewriteperson
rig-a-jig
sabulography
scanning sonar system
sculptine
Shitlington
shortlists
single-phase kilowatthour meter
sliding friction gravity conveyer
slip-spline
sodium copper(ii) sulfate
sodium gentisate
software configuration control board
Songnisan
standby computer
subduablest
sycomore fig
Sādhūke
tarried
Tenzamin
trigger-guard
Troell-junet(syndrome)
Upstart B.
uterovaginal junction
Viola wallichiana
zero-length launching