Shadowing-Übung: The fuse has been lit - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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The credit card economy.
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The credit card economy.
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Buy now, pay more, a lot more, a lot later.
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Until you can't pay at all.
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That is Canada today.
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And I'm not talking about the $1.2 trillion of national government debt or the deficit that Mark Carney doubled.
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I'm talking about the household debt,
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mortgages, credit cards, lines of credit, car loans and more.
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Canadian households now owe $1.77 for every dollar they bring home.
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That makes us by far the worst in the G7.
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Look at this graph.
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The UK, the next highest G7 country,
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is $1.20 of debt per dollar of earnings.
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France, $1.08.
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The United States, just $0.92, half of what it is in Canada.
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That means Canadians are carrying nearly twice the household debt burden of Americans.
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It wasn't always this way.
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Back in the year 2000,
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Canadian families owed $1.10 for every dollar they earned.
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Now, at close to $1.80, up 60% in just one generation.
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people's debts are far outgrowing their incomes and here is why it matters to you.
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Debt is not just a number on a spreadsheet.
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Debt is your future paycheck already spoken for.
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It is money you have not earned yet already promised to someone else.
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It means more of your money goes to the bank before you buy groceries,
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save for retirement, put kids in sports or get ahead.
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Today nearly 15 $0.15 of every dollar Canadians earn goes straight to personal debt payments.
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$0.15 of every dollar!
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That's nearing an all-time high.
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How did we get here?
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The Liberal government drove up the cost of living with high energy taxes,
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money printing, inflation and gatekeeping that blocks homes, food, fuel and paychecks.
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But the worst was housing.
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After the pandemic, liberals made a terrible mistake.
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On the advice of Mark Carney,
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then Trudeau's economic advisor, they printed money to fund endless government spending,
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most of it for programs that had nothing to do with COVID.
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Even their mass migration overwhelmed housing demand,
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all while government gatekeepers blocked supply.
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More money and people bidding on fewer homes caused real estate hyperinflation.
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The government told Canadians to borrow because rates would be low for long.
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Well, surprise, surprise.
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If you've got a mortgage or if you're considering to make a major purchase
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or you're a business and you're considering making an investment,
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you can be confident that interest rates will be low for a long time.
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Canadians listened though.
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They took out bigger mortgages,
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they stretched their budgets, they bid over asking,
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they waived conditions, not because they were being reckless,
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but to pay the insane prices the government had imposed on them.
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And to get into the market before liberal inflation
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and housing failures pushed housing even higher and home ownership even further out of reach.
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Then reality hit.
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Inflation rose and interest rates went up.
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Something Mark Carney wrongly predicted would never happen.
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And do I worry about inflation?
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Look, in the horizon of normal central bankers,
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two to three years, the horizon for monitoring policy,
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it is unlikely to materialize to a serious extent.
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In fact, we need some inflation to to come off from where we are
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because there is a lot of spare capacity in this economy.
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And families who had been pushed into massive mortgages got hit with massive increases in their monthly payments.
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Now the liberal housing bubble has burst.
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Home values are now falling,
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but the debt is still there.
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The mortgage does not shrink just because the house is worth less.
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That's why debt is so dangerous.
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On the way up, it creates the illusion of wealth.
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On the way down, it traps you.
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The asset falls, the payment rises,
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the debt stays, and the paycheck gets squeezed from every side.
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We see it happening now.
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Mortgage arrears are rising, condo sales in Toronto and Vancouver at the lowest in decades.
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Thousands of Canadians now own homes worth less than what they paid.
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And the worst may still be coming.
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By the end of 2027,
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3.1 million mortgages will renew,
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many at rates much higher than their original ultra-low levels of 2021-2022.
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Now those families face payment increases of 15 to 20 percent,
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and believe it or not,
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20 percent of Canadians over 65 still carry mortgage debt into their retirement.
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That's almost double the rates from two decades ago.
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Consumer insolvencies are already rocketing up 8.5 percent annually in the first three months of 2026,
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and 10.6% in March alone,
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while mortgage delinquencies are up 45% in Toronto and 31% in Vancouver year over year.
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On top of this personal debt,
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government debt has doubled, forcing taxpayers to spend more on interest than on healthcare transfers.
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That is the cost of Carney's credit card economy.
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More of your tax dollars go to bankers and bondholders and less to doctors and nurses.
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Now of course not everybody is suffering.
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The club of insiders, elites and power brokers win because they collect the interest and the higher prices.
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Here is Brookfield's CEO bragging about how inflation helps Mark Carney's company.
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And many of our things are regulated rate-based or contractual in nature
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and inflation is actually a positive to the numbers
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so as inflation comes in it actually helps the revenue streams of those businesses.
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Their profit is your misery and here's the conservative plan to turn misery into hope
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and turn the credit card economy into a paycheck economy.
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First, zero tax on gas for the rest of the year.
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Money back in your pocket.
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Second, cut government waste so that we can bring down deficits,
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taxes, inflation and interest rates.
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Third, unblock Canadian resources and unlock free enterprise.
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Oil, gas, critical minerals, pipelines, mines, ports, factories, homes.
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The world needs what Canada has.
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Let's get the government out of the way and get the resources out of the ground.
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Free enterprise will also allow our small businesses to produce more paychecks that pay down our debts.
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The Kearney Liberals created the credit card economy built on debt,
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inflated assets and borrowed money.
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Conservatives will build an economy based on production,
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stronger take-home pay and affordable living.
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Less debt, less taxes, less inflation.
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Affordable at home, safe at home and strong at home.

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Warum mit diesem Video sprechen üben?

Das Video "The fuse has been lit" behandelt die aktuelle finanzielle Situation in Kanada und bietet eine hervorragende Gelegenheit, Englisch sprechen zu üben. Indem Sie die Argumente des Sprechers nachahmen, verbessern Sie nicht nur Ihre Englische Aussprache, sondern entwickeln auch ein besseres Verständnis für wirtschaftliche Themen und deren sprachliche Ausdrucksweise. Das Nachsprechen (oft als shadow speak bezeichnet) hilft, Veränderungen in der Intonation und dem Sprachfluss zu erkennen, was Ihre mündlichen Fähigkeiten erheblich verbessert.

Grammatik & Ausdrücke im Kontext

Im Video werden zahlreiche Schlüsselstrukturen verwendet, die für Lernende nützlich sind. Hier sind drei Beispiele:

  • "owed $1.77 for every dollar" - Diese Struktur zeigt, wie man Schulden und finanzielle Verhältnisse ausdrückt. Es ist wichtig, diese Formulierungen für das Sprechen über Geld zu beherrschen.
  • "goes straight to personal debt payments" - Die Verwendung von "goes straight to" ist eine umgangssprachliche Art, auszudrücken, dass eine bestimmte Summe an einen speziellen Zweck gebunden ist. Diese Formulierung kann auch in anderen Diskussionen verwendet werden.
  • "caused real estate hyperinflation" - Der Ausdruck "caused" gefolgt von einem Substantiv ist nützlich, um Ursachen und Auswirkungen zu beschreiben. Dies gilt nicht nur für wirtschaftliche Diskussionen, sondern auch für viele andere Themen.

Häufige Aussprachefehler

Bei der Betrachtung des Videos können sich bestimmte Wörter und Ausdrücke als knifflig herausstellen. Hier sind einige Punkte, auf die Sie achten sollten, um Ihre Englische Aussprache zu verbessern:

  • "debt" - Dieses Wort wird oft falsch ausgesprochen, da das "b" stumm ist. Erinnern Sie sich daran, es wie "det" auszusprechen.
  • "mortgages" - Achten Sie darauf, das "g" weich auszusprechen. Es klingt mehr wie "mort-gechiz".
  • "hyperinflation" - Hierbei sollten Sie die Silben richtig betonen, um Missverständnisse zu vermeiden. Betonen Sie zuerst "hyper" und dann "in", sodass es klar und verständlich klingt.

Indem Sie sich auf diese Aspekte konzentrieren und regelmäßig die Technik des shadow speak anwenden, können Sie nicht nur Ihre Englischkenntnisse verbessern, sondern auch Ihr Selbstbewusstsein beim Sprechen stärken. Nutzen Sie YouTube als wertvolle Ressource, um Englisch zu lernen und Ihre Kommunikationsfähigkeiten auszubauen.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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