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3 The main defect in such saving schemes is that there's nothing in them for the kids. College is a thousand years away, and they probably think they'd just as soon stay home anyway. Indeed, the true purpose of such plans is usually not to promote saving but to prevent consumption. (1) Appalled by what their children spend on candy and video games (or, rather, appalled by the degree to which their children's overspending seems to mimic their own), parents devise ways to lock up their children's resources. Not surprisingly, kids quickly decide that large sums aren't real money and that all cash should either be spent immediately or hidden in a drawer. ÕâÀà´¢Ðî¼Æ»®µÄÖ÷ҪȱÏÝÔÚÓÚ£¬º¢×Ó±¾ÈËÒ»ÎÞËù»ñ¡£ÉÏ´óѧ»¹²»ÖªÒª¹ý¶àÉÙÄ꣬ËûÃÇ»òÐí»áÏëËûÃÇÄþÔ¸´ôÔÚ¼ÒÀʵ¼ÊÉÏ£¬ÕâÀà¼Æ»®µÄÕæÕýÄ¿µÄͨ³£²»ÊÇ´Ù½ø´¢Ðî¶øÊÇÏÞÖÆÏû·Ñ¡£º¢×ÓÃÇÔÚÌǹû¡¢µç×ÓÓÎÏ·Éϵύ·ÑÖ®´óÁî¼Ò³¤ÃÇÊ®·ÖÕ𾪣¨»òÕ߸üÈ·ÇеØËµ£¬ÁîËûÃdzԾªµÄÆäʵÊǺ¢×ÓÃǵij¬Ö§ÐÐΪÓëËûÃÇ×Ô¼ºµÄÏàËÆ³Ì¶È£©£¬ÓÚÊÇËûÃDZãÉè·¨Èú¢×ÓÃǽ«Ç®´æÆðÀ´²»Óá£Îã¹Öºõº¢×ÓÃǺܿì¾ÍÈ϶¨£¬´ó¶îÇ®¿î²»ÊÇʵʵÔÚÔÚµÄÇ®£¬ÓÐÁËÏÖǮҪô¸Ï½ô»¨µô£¬ÒªÃ´²ØÔÚ³éÌëÀï¡£

4 To avoid this problem with my two children, I started my own bank. It's called the First National Bank of Dave. I set up an account for each child, using the same computer program I use to keep track of my checkbook. Because I wanted my kids' deposits to grow at a pace that would hold their attention, I offered an attractive interest rate-five per cent a month. (2) Compounded, that works out to an annual rate of more than 70 per cent. (No, I don't accept deposits from strangers.) Allowances are deposited automatically on the first day of each month. The kids can make other deposits, or withdrawals, whenever they like.

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5 The Bank of Dave, which has been in operation four years, instantly turned both my children into keen savers. My son still comes to me with change he has found on the floor of the car, saying, \fast that after two years I had to roll back my monthly interest rate to three per cent. The kids protested when I announced the change, but they nodded solemnly when I explained that the law of supply and demand applies even to the supply of money. The

kids help me calculate their interest -- a useful lesson in averaging and percentages. (3) I give them unlimited access to their funds, no questions asked, and I provide printed statements on demand. ´÷·òÒøÐо­ÓªÁË4Ä꣬һÏÂ×ӾͰÑÎÒµÄÁ½¸öº¢×Ó±ä³ÉÁËÈÈÐĵĴ¢ÐîÕß¡£ÖÁ½ñÎÒ¶ù×ÓÔÚ³µÀïÕÒµ½ÁãÇ®ÈÔ»áÀ´ÕÒÎÒ˵£¬ ¡°½ñÌì¾Í°ÑÕâ¸öÉÏÕË¡£¡±Á½¸öº¢×ӵĴæ¿îÔö³¤ºÜ¿ì£¬Á½ÄêÖ®ºó£¬ÎÒ²»µÃ²»½«ÔÂÀûÂʽµÖÁ3Àå¡£ÎÒÐû²¼µ÷µÍÀûÂÊʱÁ½¸öº¢×Ó·´¶Ô£¬¿Éµ±ÎÒ½âÊÍ˵¹©Çó·¨ÔòͬÑùÊÊÓÃÓÚ»õ±Ò¹©Ó¦ºó£¬Á½ÈËÑÏËàµØµãÍ·ÔÞͬ¡£Á½¸öº¢×Ó°ïÎÒÒ»Æð¼ÆËãËûÃǵÄÀûÏ¢¡ª¡ªÕâ¿ÉÊÇѧϰ¼ÆËãÆ½¾ùÖµÓë°Ù·Ö±ÈµÄÆÄΪÓÐÓõÄÒ»¿Î¡£ËûÃÇʹÓÃ×Ô¼ºµÄ×ʽðÎÒ²»¼ÓÈκÎÏÞÖÆ£¬²»×÷ÈκÎѯÎÊ£¬ÎÒ»¹¸ù¾ÝÒªÇóËæÊ±Ìṩ´òÓ¡µÄÕ˵¥¡£

6 The high rate of interest is not the only attractive feature of the Bank of Dave. Equally important from the kids' point of view is that their accounts belong to them. When they save, they harvest the benefit; when they want to spend, they don't need permission. Children who have no control over their own funds have no incentive not to beg for money and then spend every dollar that comes into their hands. ¸ßÀûÂʲ¢·Ç´÷·òÒøÐÐΩһÓÕÈËÖ®´¦¡£ÔÚº¢×Ó¿´À´Í¬ÑùÖØÒªµÄÊÇ£¬ËûÃǵĴæ¿îÊôÓÚËûÃÇ×Ô¼º¡£ËûÃÇ´æÇ®±ã»á»ñÀû£»ËûÃÇÏ뻨ǮҲÓò»×Å»ñµÃÐí¿É¡£º¢×Ó¶Ô×Ô¼ºµÄǮûÓÐ×ÔÖ÷Ȩ£¬¾ÍûÓÐʲô¶«Î÷¼¤ÀøËûÃDz»È¥ÉìÊÖҪǮ£¬²»°Ñµ½ÊÖµÄÇ®»¨¸ö¹â¡£

7 The way to help children become rational consumers is to give them more control, not less. Before we go on vacation, I'll usually give my kids an extra twenty bucks or so, which I deposit in their accounts. I tell them that they can spend the extra money on a T-shirt, save it, spend it before we leave, or do anything else they want with it -- but that while we are on vacation, they won't receive any additional pocket money from me (except in the form of communal purchases considered by custom to be vacation entitlements, such as candy, ice cream, movie tickets, and so on). Because any money they spend starts out as theirs, not mine, they think twice before throwing it away. In a souvenir store on Martha's Vineyard a couple of summers ago my son quietly studied the unpromising merchandise while a friend of his loudly cajoled his parents into paying five dollars for a toy gun, which fell apart almost before we got back to the car. My son ended up spending thirty-three cents for an unopened geode, which he later cracked open by hitting it with a hammer -- a good value, it seemed to me. If he had been spending my money instead of his, he undoubtedly would have wanted a toy gun instead.

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8 \are instinctive capitalists. If given enough leeway, they quickly become shrewd managers of their own finances. When parents fail in their efforts at financial education, it's usually because for reasons of their own they have managed to make saving seem painful and dull. Money is fun, and it's almost entirely self-explanatory. (4) The only way to teach kids to adopt a long-term perspective is to give them a short-term incentive for doing so. ¶ùͯÊÇÌìÉúµÄ×ʱ¾¼Ò¡£Ö»Òª¸øÓè×ã¹»µÄ×ÔÓɻÓàµØ£¬ËûÃǺܿì¾Í»á³ÉΪ¾«Ã÷µÄÀí²ÆÕß¡£Èç¹û¼Ò³¤µÄÀí²Æ½ÌÓýʧ°Ü£¬ÄÇÍùÍùÊÇÒòΪËûÃdzöÓÚ×ÔÉíµÄÔ­Òò°Ñ´æÇ®ÅªµÃËÆºõ¼ÈÍ´¿àÓÖÎÞÁÄ¡£½ðÇ®ÊÇÓÐȤµÄ£¬¶øÇÒ¼¸ºõÍêÈ«ÊDz»½²×ÔÃ÷µÄ¡£½ÌÓýº¢×ÓÃÇ¿´ÎÊÌâÒªÓг¤Ô¶Ä¿¹âµÄΩһ;¾¶£¬ÊÇÈú¢×ÓÃǽüÆÚÄÚ±ãÄܳ¢µ½Ä³ÖÖÌðÍ·£¬´Ó¶ø¼¤ÀøËûÃÇÈ¥ÄÇÑù×ö¡£

Unit2

Does being rich mean you live a completely different life from ordinary people? Not, it seems, if your name is Sam Walton.

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THE RICHEST MAN IN AMERICA, DOWN HOME

Art Harris

1 He put on a dinner jacket to serve as a waiter at the birthday party of The Richest Man in America. He imagined what surely awaited: a mansion, a \for every day of the week,\dogs with diamond collars, servants everywhere. ÃÀ¹úÏç°ÍÀÐÊ׸» °¢ÌØ¡¤¹þÀï˹

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2 Then he was off to the house, wheeling past the sleepy town square in Bentonville, a remote Arkansas town of 9,920, where Sam Walton started with a little dime store that grew into a $6 billion discount chain called Wal-Mart. He drove down a country road, turned at a mailbox marked \at a house in the woods.

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3 It was nice, but no palace. The furniture appeared a little worn. An old pickup truck sat in the garage and a muddy bird dog ran about the yard. He never spotted any servants.

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4 \ ¡°Ì«ÁîÈËʧÍûÁË£¬¡±ÊÌÕß½ÜÃס¤±«ÓÈ̾µÀ¡£

5 Only in America can a billionaire carry on like plain folks and get away with it. And the 67-year-old discount king Sam Moore Walton still travels these windy back roads in his 1979 Ford pickup, red and white, bird dogs by his side, and, come

shooting season, waits in line like everyone else to buy shells at the local Wal-Mart. Ö»ÓÐÔÚÃÀ¹ú£¬Ò»¸öÒÚÍò¸»Î̲ÅÄÜÏñÆÕͨ°ÙÐÕÒ»Ñù£¬°²Îȵعý×ÅÆÕÆÕͨͨµÄÈÕ×Ó¡£67ËêµÄÁ®¼Ûµê´óÍõÈøÄ·¡¤Ä¶û¡¤ÎÖ¶û¶ÙÈÔÈ»¿ª×ÅËûÄÇÁ¾ºì°×Á½É«µÄ1979Äê³ö³§µÄ¸£ÌØÅÆÇáÐÍ»õ³µ´©ÐÐÔÚÍäÍäÇúÇúµÄÏç¼äСµÀÉÏ£¬Éí±ß×ø×ÅËûµÄ²¶ÇÝÁÔÈ®¡£µ±á÷ÁÔ¼¾½ÚÀ´ÁÙʱ£¬Ëû¸ú±ðÈËÒ»ÑùÔÚµ±µØµÄÎÖ¶ûÂêÉ̵êÅŶӹºÂòÁÔǹ×Óµ¯¡£

6 \doesn't want any special treatment,\says night manager Johnny Baker, who struggles to call the boss by his first name as a recent corporate memo commands. Few here think of his billions; they call him \\day for his dream,\ ¡°Ëû²»ÒªÈκÎÌØÊâ´ýÓö£¬¡± Ò¹°à¾­ÀíÇÇÄᡤ±´¿Ë˵£¬Ëû·ÑÁ˺ôóµÄ¾¢²ÅÈ繫˾×î½üÒ»·Ý±¸Íü¼Ëù¹æ¶¨µÄÄÇÑù¶Ô×Ô¼ºµÄÀϰåÒÔÃûÏà³Æ¡£ÕâÀXºõûÈËÈ¥ÏëËûµÄÒÚÍòÉí¼Û£¬ËûÃdzÆËûÎªÈøÄ·ÏÈÉú£¬Ë¿ºÁ²»ÒÔËûµÄƽÃñ×÷·çΪ¹Ö¡£¡°Ëû»¹ÊÇÄǸöÔÚÊÐÕþ¹ã³¡¿ªÁ®¼Ûµê£¬ÎªÁË×Ô¼ºµÄÃÎÏëÿÌ칤×÷18¸öСʱµÄÈË£¬Ò»µãû±ä£¬¡±Êг¤Àí²éµÂ¡¤»ô°Í¿Ë˵¡£

7 By all accounts, he's friendly, cheerful, a fine neighbor who does his best to blend in, never flashy, never throwing his weight around.

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8 No matter how big a time he had on Saturday night, you can find him in church on Sunday. Surely in a reserved seat, right? \don't have reserved seats,\says Gordon Garlington III, pastor of the local church.

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9 So where does The Richest Man in America sit? Wherever he finds a seat. \night, he and his wife were in back washing dishes.\

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10 For 19 years, he's used the same barber. John Mayhall finds him waiting when he opens up at 7 a.m. He chats about the national news, or reads in his chair, perhaps the Benton County Daily Democrat, another Walton property that keeps him off the front page. It buried the Forbes list at the bottom of page 2.

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11 \ ¡°Ëûѹ¸ù¶ù²»ÊÇÄÇÖÖ°®ÉÏÍ·°æÐÂÎŵÄÈË£¬¡±Ò»Î»±¨Éç¹ÍÔ±½âÊÍ˵¡£

12 But one recent morning, The Richest Man in America did something that would have made headlines anywhere in the world: He forgot his money. \said, 'Forget it, take care of it next time, '\and he went home for his wallet.\

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13 Wasn't that, well, a little strange? \sir,\says Mayhall, \only thing strange about Sam Walton is that he isn't strange.\

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14 But just how long Walton can hold firm to his folksy habits with celebrity hunters keeping following him wherever he goes is anyone's guess. Ever since Forbes magazine pronounced him America's richest man, with $2.8 billion in Wal-Mart stock, he's been a rich man on the run, steering clear of reporters, dreamers, and schemers. È»¶ø£¬ÎÖ¶û¶ÙËùµ½Ö®´¦ÃûÈË×·ÐÇ×å½ô¸ú²»ÉᣬËûµÄƽÃñϰ¹ßÄܱ£³Ö¶à¾Ã£¬¾ÍºÜÄÑ˵ÁË¡£×Ô´Ó¡¶¸£²¼Ë¹¡·ÔÓÖ¾Ðû²¼ËûÓµÓмÛÖµ28ÒÚµÄÎÖ¶ûÂê¹ÉƱ³ÉΪÃÀ¹úÊ׸»ÒÔºó£¬Ëû¾Í³ÉÁËÒ»¸ö¶«¶ãÎ÷²ØµÄ¸»ÈË£¬ËûµÃ˦¿ª¼ÇÕß¡¢Ñ°ÃÎÕߣ¬»¹ÓÐͼı²»¹ìÕß¡£

15 \Von Gremp, \he doesn't know whether he is or not -- and he doesn't care. He doesn't spend much. He owns stock, but he's always left it in the company so it could

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