Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
Times are hard for many people. Prices are rising around the world. The COVID-19 pandemic and Ukraine War have pushed up food and energy bills. In some countries, the price of energy has tripled. In other countries, food is 20 per cent more expensive than a year ago. A group of wealthy business leaders who own multi-billion-dollar companies has asked their governments to tax them more. The leaders met at a meeting of global leaders in Davos, Switzerland. The group of multi-millionaires and billionaires actually protested in the streets. They called for governments to increase taxes for people like them. They marched in the streets with left-wing activists. The protestors wanted fairer tax systems. The World Economic Forum has been held in Davos, Switzerland since 1971. World leaders meet there once a year to discuss global problems. The group of wealthy business people called themselves the Patriotic Millionaires. A UK millionaire said: "It's outrageous that our political leaders listen to those who have the most but know the least about the economic impact of this cost of living crisis." He said many super-rich people "pay infamously little in taxes". He added: "The only acceptable outcome from this conference is to tax the richest and tax us now." Another millionaire at the protest said: "We have hit the end of the line when another quarter of a billion people will be pushed into extreme poverty this year."
Comprehension questions- What does the article say is hard?
- What pushed up prices besides COVID-19?
- By how much has food risen in some countries in the past year?
- Where in Davos did the millionaires protest?
- Who did the group of millionaires march with?
- When was the first meeting in Davos held?
- What name did the millionaire protestors give to themselves?
- Who did a millionaire say knew the least?
- What did a millionaire protestor say we had hit the end of?
- What will a quarter of a billion people be pushed into?
Back to the millionaires' tax lesson.