6BEO - The end of cash

6BEO - The end of cash
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Slide 1: Tekstslide
EngelsSecundair onderwijs

In deze les zitten 15 slides, met tekstslides en 3 videos.

time-iconLesduur is: 100 min

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6BEO - The end of cash

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Watch the following clips and answer the questions
• What do these ads promote?
• How do they do that?
• What do you think of these ads? Explain your answer.
• Which one do you prefer? Why?

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Slide 3 - Video

Slide 4 - Video

Read the article p.41
Why the clock is ticking to a cashless UK

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

a brim: een rand 
hessian: jute 
the lodgements: het deponeren 
zealous: fanatiek 
a chancellor: een minister van financiën 
a civil servant: een ambtenaar 
a counter service: een loketdienst 
to abate: afnemen

resilient: robuust 
to proliferate: zich verspreiden 
a ledger: een grootboek, kasboek 
  on the fringes: in de marge 
legal tender: een wettig betaalmiddel
to alienate: uitsluiten 
to shun: afwijzen 
a threshold: een drempelwaarde, grens

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

In your own words, briefly describe how the banks’ attitude towards cash has changed between 2016 and now.
  • In 2016 the banks didn’t mind people bringing in bags full of cash. They didn’t do much to prevent money laundering. These days, banks are overly zealous against cash. They impose limits on cash deposits and withdrawals, and they are forcing customers towards a “cashless society”.
b What does the word ‘lender’ mean in this article?
  • It is a synonym for ‘bank’.
c What are ‘shared banking hubs’?
  • They are mega-branches that are shared among several high street banks, with a counter service run by the Post Office.
d Name the main advantage of using cash, compared to paying cashless.
  • People have far more control and privacy when using cash compared with digital transactions, which leave a traceable footprint.
e Groups like Cash Matters mention some more advantages of using cash. Which ones?
  • Cash is the most secure payment method, is resilient in times of crisis and offers privacy when fraud and personal data collection is proliferating. On top of that, banknotes and coins reflect a nation’s identity and its magic moments, presenting its most significant people, landmarks and values to the world.
f Summarise what conspiracy theorists claim about going cashless.
  • They claim digital currencies are being used to control populations and that people who are determined “less desirable” will be locked out.

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

g Are these conspiracy theorists right?
  • No. They twisted the words of Eswar Prasad, an economics professor from Cornell University, who spoke about both the benefits and the dangers of CBDCs.
h Which trend is on the rise on the British high street at the moment? Also explain why.
  • There is an increasing number of shops and restaurants refusing to accept cash, including Prezzo, Itsu, Côte Brasserie, many branches of Starbucks and Burger King. Other chains continue to take cash but say they ‘encourage’ card payments. They say it is easier, quicker and safer, both for the staff and the customers.
i What does the British Government do about this?
  • It has no plans to force shops to accept notes and coins. Businesses have to be able to choose the forms of payment they accept, although its proposals for legislation support cash acceptance.
j How many people in Britain would be in serious trouble if society went cashless? Why?
  • More than a million adults in the UK do not have a bank account and rely solely on cash.
 

Slide 8 - Tekstslide

Match words and definitions
  1. F
  2. D
  3. G
  4. A
  5. C
  6. B
  7. H

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

Read the text and complete the gaps with words from the previous exercise.
  1. withdrawal
  2. ATM
  3. bank branch
  4. deposit
  5. legal tender
  6. turnover
  7. cryptocurrency
  8. money laundering







Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Put the sentences in the correct order

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

Check your work
Watch the video on money laundering and check your answers in the exercise on p.49

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Slide 13 - Video

Put the sentences in the correct order
5
9
2
7
4
10
1
8
6
3

Slide 14 - Tekstslide

Impressing your economics teacher 
  1. Work in pairs. 
  2. Student A will research how Bitcoin works, student B will research how electronic
    payment systems like PayPal, Apple Pay and Google Pay work. 
  3. Follow the instructions. 
  • Go online and find articles or videos (in English!) that explain your topic. 
  • Take notes in the form of keywords. 
  • With the help of the keywords, write eight to ten sentences that clearly
    explain the matter. 
  • Add linking words and conjunctions for a logically structured text. 
  • Add a minimum of eight new words and their translations to the personal
    vocabulary list on the last page. 
  • Put the sentences in a grid in scrambled order and do the exercise yourself.
    Can you put the sentences in the correct order without too much effort? 
  • Swap your grids and try to put your partner’s sentences in the correct order. 
  • Finally, in your own words, explain how your partner’s topic works.

Slide 15 - Tekstslide