5.9每日一篇|英語(yǔ)外刊社
![]()
5.9每日一篇|英語(yǔ)外刊社
Food producers:Yes, they can (and box, and package)
Fat times for America’s big food
【1】For years nutritionists have advised Americans to steer clear ofgroceryshops’ centralaislesand instead fill their trolleys from the outlying shelves. Fresh meat, dairy products, fresh fruit andvegetablesoften line supermarket walls; cans, boxes and otherpackagesof lesssalubriousprocessed food arestackedin the middle. Some shoppers haveheededthat advice: sales ofcannedsoup have beenlacklustrein recent times, even as those of fresherrefrigeratedpotages have grown. Now makers of thepackagedstuff arestaginga comeback. This says as much about shifting economic conditions as it does about products on shelves.
【2】This month Conagra, which owns brands including Orville Redenbacher’spopcorn, Bird’s Eyefrozenveg and Duncan Hines cakemixes, reported bumper results for its latest quarter. Sales andmarginswere all up year on year. The companyexpectshigher earnings in thefiscalyear to May than it had previously forecast. A few weeks earlier General Mills, which peddlescannedsoups,frozenvegetablesand breakfast cereals,unveiledsimilarly juicyquarterlynumbers. McCormick & Company, which sellsspicesandsauces, and the J.M. Smucker Company, best known forjamsandpeanutbutter, are likewise having a sweet time of it. Investors are licking theirlips: Conagra’s share price has risen by8% in the past12months, compared with a decline of7% for the S&P500index of large American firms. General Mills’ has shot up by23%.
【3】For America’spackaged-food firms, the past decade was a cycle offamineandfeast. Lean years before thepandemicended when restaurants closed amid covid-19and peoplestockedtheir pantries. Stimuluschequesfrom the government meant that shoppers were flush and the food companies were not being nagged by their retail partners to offerdiscounts. Then in2022people began dining out again, puttingpressureonvolumeseven ascommodity-priceshockscaused by Russia’sinvasionof Ukraine pushed up costs.
【4】As big food’s results show, the industry is managing to ride out the latesttumult. For one thing, thepandemicmay havealteredconsumer habits, leading to a lasting bump in theconsumptionoffrozenandpackagedmeals. Americans are still eating more meals at home than they were before the first covid-19lockdowns. According to EY, a consultancy, nearly three in four consumers anyway do not carefullydistinguishfrozenvegetablesfrom the fresh sort, treating them as the same category. And thoughinflationis leading shoppers to trade down frombrandedproducts to retailers’ cheaper private-labelofferingswhen buying things likecosmeticsor home goods, they are still happy to pay a bit extra forpremiumgrub;20- and30-somethings inparticularseem readier to spend larger shares of their income on food and are less likely to trade down than theirelders.
【5】The food giants also benefit from a diverse range of products and brands, which they areadaptingto changing consumer tastes. Conagra has introduced (Italian readersavertyour eyes) “crustless pizzas”—microwavable boxes ofsauce,cheeseand meat—to appeal to the carb-phobic. ItsveganPower Bowls seem tailor-made for theavocado-loving yogacrowd. General Mills is marketingcerealas an after-school snack andalternativetodessertin the evening, rather than just something to munch for breakfast. And although they managed tomaintainor even expand theirmarginsby raising prices in line with their costs or faster, they might be all too content to take advantage of cheaperinputswithout concomitant price cuts.
【6】Can the good times last? The biggest question-mark hangs over salesvolumes, which could be crimped by those higher prices and aloomingeconomicslowdownthat maypromptshoppers to startpinchingpennies. If wage growth slows orunemploymentticks up, at some point people will probably cut back even on smallerluxuries. Should one food firm decide to trim prices in an effort to boostvolumesat itscompetitors’ expense, an old-fashioned price war mayerupt. For the time being, though, the foodmakers will keepreapingthe peacedividend.
①短語(yǔ):
1.原文:For years nutritionists have advised Americans to steer clear of grocery shops’ central aisles
詞典:steer clear of sb/sth 避開(kāi),躲避,繞開(kāi)
例句:I think a lot of people, women in particular, steer clear of these sensitive issues.
我認(rèn)為很多人,特別是女性,都會(huì)回避這些敏感問(wèn)題。
2.原文:Now makers of the packaged stuff are staging a comeback.
詞典:make/stage a comeback 1.復(fù)出,重返,東山再起 2.再度流行
例句:Tight fitting T-shirts are making a comeback.
緊身T恤再度流行起來(lái)。
Sixties singing star Petula Clark is making a comeback.
60年代的歌星佩杜拉·克拉克復(fù)出了。
3.原文:Investors are licking their lips
詞典:lick/smack one’s lips 1.(在吃好東西前)舔嘴唇 2.迫不及待,渴望
例句:They were licking their lips at the thought of clinching the deal.
他們一想到馬上要做成這筆交易就顯得急不可待了。
4.原文:General Mills’ has shot up by 23%.
詞典:shoot up 1.躥個(gè)兒,迅速長(zhǎng)高 2.陡增,猛漲
例句:Ticket prices shot up last year.
去年票價(jià)猛漲。
Their kids have shot up since I last saw them.
自我上次見(jiàn)了以后,他們家?guī)讉€(gè)孩子一下子長(zhǎng)高了。
5.原文:Then in 2022 people began dining out again
詞典:dine out 下館子,外出就餐
例句:She does not enjoy parties or dining out.
她不喜歡參加派對(duì),也不喜歡出去吃飯。
6.原文:the industry is managing to ride out the latest tumult
詞典:ride out sth 安然渡過(guò),挺過(guò)(風(fēng)暴或者危機(jī))
例句:The ruling party think they can ride out the political storm.
執(zhí)政黨認(rèn)為他們可以安然度過(guò)這場(chǎng)政治風(fēng)暴。
7.原文:nearly three in four consumers anyway do not carefully distinguish frozen vegetables from the fresh sort
詞典:distinguish (between) A and B | distinguishA from B區(qū)分;辨別;分清
例句:It was hard to distinguish one twin from the other.
很難分辨出一對(duì)孿生兒誰(shuí)是誰(shuí)。
Sometimes reality and fantasy are hard to distinguish.
有時(shí)候現(xiàn)實(shí)和幻想很難區(qū)分。
8.原文:treating them as the same category
詞典:treat sth as sth把…看作;把…視為
例句:I decided to treat his remark as a joke.
我決定把他的話當(dāng)作戲言。
9.原文:20- and 30-somethings in particular seem readier to spend larger shares of their income on food and are less likely to trade down than their elders.
詞典:trade down 降低消費(fèi)
例句:They are selling their five-bedroom house and trading down to a two-bedroom cottage.
他們要把 5 居室的房子賣掉,換一所較便宜的 2 居室小屋。
10.原文:which they are adapting to changing consumer tastes
詞典:adapt (oneself) (to sth) 適應(yīng)(新情況)
例句:We have had to adapt quickly to the new system.
我們不得不迅速適應(yīng)新制度。
A large organization can be slow to adapt to change.
大機(jī)構(gòu)可能應(yīng)變遲緩。
11.原文:Conagra has introduced (Italian readers avert your eyes) “crustless pizzas”to appeal to the carb-phobic
詞典:appeal to sb 有吸引力,有感染力,引起興趣
例句:The design has to appeal to all ages and social groups.
設(shè)計(jì)得要雅俗共賞,老幼皆宜。
12.原文:And although they managed to maintain or even expand their margins by raising prices in line with their costs or faster
詞典:in line with sth與…相似(或緊密相連)
例句:Annual pay increases will be in line with inflation.
每年加薪幅度將與通貨膨脹掛鉤。
13.原文:If wage growth slows or unemployment ticks up
詞典:tick up 增長(zhǎng)
例句:Inflation is persistent and economists expect it to tick up more this year.
通貨膨脹居高不下,經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家預(yù)計(jì)今年還會(huì)進(jìn)一步加劇。
14.原文:at some point people will probably cut back even on smaller luxuries
詞典:cut back on sth 縮減,減少
例句:If we don't sell more we'll have to cut back on production.
我們?nèi)舨荒芏噤N,就必須減產(chǎn)。
②長(zhǎng)難句
1.原文:And though inflation is leading shoppers to trade downfrom branded products to retailers’ cheaper private-label offeringswhen buying things like cosmetics or home goods, theyarestill happyto pay a bit extra for premium grub.
2.分析:主句是簡(jiǎn)單的主系表結(jié)構(gòu)+狀語(yǔ)theyarehappyto pay a bit extra for premium grub,其中不定式介詞短語(yǔ)to do sth為原因狀語(yǔ)。though引導(dǎo)讓步狀語(yǔ)從句,在該從句中,主句是inflation is leading shoppers to trade down,后面的from...to...作狀語(yǔ)。when buying things like cosmetics or home goods是時(shí)間狀語(yǔ)。
3.譯文:并且盡管通貨膨脹正讓購(gòu)物者在購(gòu)買化妝品或家居品時(shí)降級(jí)消費(fèi),選擇從名牌產(chǎn)品到零售商售賣的更為廉價(jià)的私有商標(biāo)商品,購(gòu)物者仍然樂(lè)意多花費(fèi)一些錢去購(gòu)買高檔食品。
1.原文:The biggest question-markhangs oversales volumes, which could be crimped by those higher prices and a looming economic slowdownthat may prompt shoppers to start pinching pennies.
2.分析:首句是主謂賓結(jié)構(gòu)The biggest question-mark(主語(yǔ))hangs over(謂語(yǔ)動(dòng)詞)sales volumes(賓語(yǔ))。which引導(dǎo)非限制性定語(yǔ)從句,修飾先行詞sales volumes,表示“銷量會(huì)被高價(jià)以及潛在的經(jīng)濟(jì)放緩削減”。that引導(dǎo)定語(yǔ)從句,修飾a looming economic slowdown,表示這一潛在的經(jīng)濟(jì)放緩“或許會(huì)促使購(gòu)物者開(kāi)始節(jié)約”,此處涉及表達(dá)prompt sb to do sth“促使某人做某事”。
3.譯文:最大的問(wèn)題出在銷量上,而更高的售價(jià)以及潛在的經(jīng)濟(jì)下滑或許會(huì)使購(gòu)物者開(kāi)始縮衣節(jié)食,進(jìn)而降低銷量。
③寫作技巧:
The biggestquestion-mark hangs oversales volumes
最大的不確定性在于銷量
表達(dá):當(dāng)寫作中想表達(dá)“對(duì)……不確定”時(shí),可以用上述句型“The question mark hangs over sth”,或者是“There is a question mark over sth”代替“The question/problem is that ...”。
例句:There are bound to be question marks over his future...
他的未來(lái)必然還存有很多不確定的因素。
④背景知識(shí):
康尼格拉公司(Conagra):康尼格拉食品公司(ConAgra Foods, Inc.)的主要業(yè)務(wù)是生產(chǎn)和銷售加工及袋裝食品。康尼格拉食品公司是一家包裝食品公司,客戶包括百貨零售店、餐廳、食品服務(wù)公司以及食品加工商,而公司旗下的大眾消費(fèi)品牌則包括Banquet、男廚牌、Egg Beaters, 健康之選, 希伯來(lái)熱狗、亨氏, Marie Callender's、奧利華?雷登巴赫以及PAM。康尼格拉食品公司成立于1861年,總部位于內(nèi)布拉斯加州奧馬哈市。康尼格拉公司是美國(guó)最大的食品制造商,第二大的食品零售商。美國(guó)人的餐桌上幾乎少不了康尼格拉公司的產(chǎn)品,不管是在家(蔬菜產(chǎn)品)還是在外面(飯店、賓館、學(xué)校和其他機(jī)構(gòu))。
⑤段落大意:
【1】營(yíng)養(yǎng)學(xué)家建議民眾應(yīng)該多選購(gòu)新鮮果蔬、新鮮肉類和奶制品
【2】目前各大食品公司賺取巨額收益
【3】包裝食品公司在過(guò)去十年可謂是坐過(guò)山車
【4】食品行業(yè)正在渡過(guò)最新一輪的混亂
【5】食品巨頭能夠從多元化產(chǎn)品中獲益
【6】銷量是紅利期能否持續(xù)下去的關(guān)鍵
考研英語(yǔ)雜志經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)人英文外刊|2022年經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)人英文雜志(2022年經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)人周刊英雜志已更新完畢)
366外刊社每日分享英文雜志,考研英語(yǔ)雜志,考研英語(yǔ)外刊雙語(yǔ)精讀,經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)人雜志,英文雜志下載。
![]()
![]()
![]()
特別聲明:以上內(nèi)容(如有圖片或視頻亦包括在內(nèi))為自媒體平臺(tái)“網(wǎng)易號(hào)”用戶上傳并發(fā)布,本平臺(tái)僅提供信息存儲(chǔ)服務(wù)。
Notice: The content above (including the pictures and videos if any) is uploaded and posted by a user of NetEase Hao, which is a social media platform and only provides information storage services.