He said increased overheads such as insurance, rents and service charges have resulted in some shops becoming unviable. |
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The costs included overheads such as salaries, rents and repairs but no depreciation as all improvements were charged to the year's account. |
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They get the sign-painter's boy to help, because his family rents rooms in the schoolmaster's house. |
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That depresses wage rates and rents, and brings us back to a more competitive position. |
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Eve rents a summerhouse in the village of Norfolk, imagining that it would be an ideal summer retreat set amidst an idyllic surrounding. |
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In the early eighteenth century, rents were falling and landowners had little incentive to press for short lets. |
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Imaginary resources, in the form of sovereign rents and aid flows, lie at the heart of the impasse. |
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But that meant rents were cheap and people like me could live well and do our art. |
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But unless rents were to rise significantly, and we have set our face against such a change, progress would be slow. |
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The rents that are collected are presently insufficient to cover these costs as well as other overheads. |
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With improved productivity, the nobility could now collect higher rents and obtain greater profits from the sale of surplus agricultural goods. |
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The oversupply of rental property has resulted in landlords cutting rents to attract tenants. |
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Another sidewards glance at other areas of her life at this time sees her threatening to seize the cattle of tenants for non-payment of rents. |
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But with interest rates low and rents on the rise, it seems nearly everyone in town is hustling to buy a home. |
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In fact, she rents an apartment so they can conduct their liaison without being disturbed. |
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The occupiers would be lower order users who would occupy the units on short lets at cheap rents. |
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A lot of landlords are finding it difficult to accept lower rents and one or two have actually sold. |
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Workers called for better street paving, the sale of municipal lands to workers, and lower rents. |
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But on the face of it there was a seamless transfer with rents being paid by the same system and services unaffected. |
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In some parts there are basically too many landlords chasing too few tenants, which is pushing down rents. |
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Average rents were universally out of the reach of welfare recipients and their families. |
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The buildings are usually controlled by slumlords who overfill the flats, charge exorbitant rents and allow the buildings to become rundown. |
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His goods have become commoditised, sales are slowing, while rents and labour costs are rising. |
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On his estate, rents were collected, a grace period given if needed, but no other exactions were demanded. |
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However, an organic dairy farmer who rents land from us has diversified by selling vegetables at farmers' markets. |
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As usual these chains, with their eagerness to pay over the odds, will force up rents so that small businesses are squeezed out. |
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A building-by-building response simply cannot keep up with the city-wide surge in rents or the waves of displacement that result. |
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The rents generated by the sites depend on the prosperity of the enterprises on the sites. |
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Investors saw an opportunity in snapping up new houses and apartments, seeing the opportunity for a quick buck as rents climbed sharply. |
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It also defies belief that the Law proposes that rents are divorced from the ability to pay. |
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This is a planning process and therefore there should be no consideration of extra business rates, land disposals or ground rents. |
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They were a subdued and powerless people owing their very existence to landlords and their agents who worked them to the bond with rack rents. |
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Prime retail rents have soared over the past decade, but margins have not kept pace. |
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At the cathedral teachers were secured for the boy's school through seat rents supplemented by church offertories and school fees. |
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The man who was being questioned rents a ground-floor flat in a Victorian semi-detached house in Abbey Road, Chertsey. |
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Figures indicate that landlords have been increasing rents in response to rent allowance limits set by health boards. |
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When you look at the package the traders get, rents in Salisbury are comparably very favourable. |
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Shortages for low-income Torontonians were once again rampant, rents were spiraling and evictions were increasing. |
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If your client rents inventory space, find out how the client is billed for inventory storage. |
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Broadly, over half of English tenants held their land by copyhold, that is by customary tenures involving low rents. |
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And we've got a council house whereas other drivers have mortgages or private rents. |
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I live in an old dilapidated building that has poor tenants and relatively cheap rents. |
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The 72 flats are mostly tenanted at modest rents due to the building's poor condition. |
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The duke's wealth was squeezed from rents and extracted from a starving tenantry. |
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Fair rents are established by an individual consideration of a statutory definition that defies scientific precision. |
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By the 19th century, the traditional rents were so out of line with real values that landlords sought to convert them to rack rents. |
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His British landlord rents out two rooms to four immigrants, while simultaneously claiming benefit for the property. |
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The tenants-in-chief might then grant the land to sub-tenants in return for rents or services, or work the estate themselves through a bailiff. |
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In 1725 the Auditor of Land Revenue suggested that a bailiff be appointed for the bailiwick to collect rents. |
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For this, he had to perform a very heavy burden of services, and pay some money and some rents in kind. |
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Thus did ceremonies and their successful conduct knit up the repeated homicidal rents in the social fabric. |
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Write him a letter about how you feel, but make sure to check with your rents to make sure it's ok. |
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By 1129-30 it is clear that a widespread commutation into money rents had taken place. |
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I had to make sure the end result was appealing as people paying premium rents expect nothing but the best. |
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We refuse to trade secure tenancies and affordable rents for new bathrooms and kitchens. |
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The fall in office rents followed four consecutive years of double-digit growth and was largely caused by fears over the economy. |
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Now their workers' cooperative rents its own office space in Mbeya and contributes to agricultural projects for youth. |
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Strict rent control laws here hold down rents but give landlords little incentive to shell out for earthquake proofing. |
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A number of the older buildings downtown have been ticketed for renovation and artists have begun to drift in, lured by low rents. |
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You'll find a steep slope, a rope tow, and a warming house that rents inner tubes of radical proportions. |
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One of the reasons rents have been rising is that rental demand is on the up. |
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The members have called for the deferment of the increases to allow tenants come to terms with the new rents. |
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This makes sense, Accomando says, because market rents are relatively static, fixed by the competition in the marketplace. |
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He purchased the business in 1995 with his wife, Barbara, and rents out canal barges to holidaymakers. |
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Walter finds manual work in a timber yard, and rents an apartment which happens to be opposite a school. |
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He rents a room overlooking an elementary school and is given a job at a timber yard. |
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With rent control illegal for commercial and office spaces, non-residential landlords are free to raise rents to market value or above. |
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Anyone who's experienced the soaring rents in Mile-End knows the yuppification of the area has been well under way for some time. |
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Lower rents, rent-free periods and tenant-friendly break clauses are now inserted in deals as a matter of course. |
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There was, however, property tax on man-made capital to be reduced as an offset to higher tax on pure land rents. |
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Nor has it revalued its promising retail warehousing, where an improving tenant mix is leading to a rise in rents. |
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The rents, explicit and implicit, would then become part of the public troves. |
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The rents for the year 1827-28 were culled mostly from notices in the Chester Chronicle. |
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She said Government policy required all registered social landlords to ensure rents were brought into line with what is known as a target rent. |
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He managed public office and residential buildings, collecting rents, and taking charge of maintenance and repairs, etc. |
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This will give rise to increased tenant demand and rising rents in office, retail and residential properties. |
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The prices being paid for existing businesses and the rents being offered for new openings are in many cases unsustainable. |
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The building is owned by Burnley council and the town council rents a room there. |
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This resistance could include workplace go-slows, mass sick leaves, industrial and military sabotage, and the non-payment of rents and taxes. |
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Many of those seminar attendees are taking an enormous gamble on apartment rents remaining high. |
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The plaintiffs' mortgages included the right of attornment of rents and other remedies in the event of default. |
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They demanded increased hazard pay, shift bonuses, and subsidies to cover house rents and children's education. |
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It's accessible, with big dunes right off U.S.101, and a full-service shop that rents, sells, and manufactures sandboards. |
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The new rents are an illustration of the value of Xintiandi and also the result of two-sided negotiations. |
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Princes, clerics, and feudal lords often levied taxes, tithes, and rents as shares of certain crops. |
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The increased demand for retail space, combined with an undersupply of accommodation, is pushing rents up strongly. |
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When the university so gentrifies its immediate neighborhood that store rents there are higher than in the city center, a lesson is taught. |
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Ironically, the higher rents of many downtown workspaces are the result of artists reclaiming the otherwise empty buildings. |
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Artificially low rents discourage construction and maintenance, resulting in fewer available apartments. |
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Landlords of rented houses will simply put the rents up to cover the cost, but how are the rest of us supposed to raise the extra money? |
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The gloomy prognosis makes some sense because office rents and vacancies are traditionally trailing indicators of the broader economy. |
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Prices have scarcely risen over the past year, while rents are at their softest in recent memory. |
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Joseph Elianore obtained royal licence in 1338 to found a chantry there which during the 1340s he endowed with numerous lands and rents. |
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Examples of distortions are monopoly rents, hidden subsidies, artificially determined floors and ceilings on input prices. |
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First, he believed that, given how high rents were in many communities, the lower-middle class deserved some tax subsidies. |
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It also rents several floors in a building in the city's prime business area, away from the public university campuses. |
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At least Kaisa has his address in Oslo, whither she flies, dressed in a smart black business suit, and promptly rents a flashy new car with which to impress Tomas. |
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These reforms were intended to free the common man to pursue business opportunities without the oppressive yoke of high interest rates or excessive rents. |
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No matter how much legal protection you have in place, though, you still must have conscientious tenants paying reasonable rents to come out ahead as a landlord. |
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All four facilities are paying relatively low annual rents to the council. |
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Smith said the rise in interest rates is likely to increase the popularity of residential investment properties which offer guaranteed rents to landlords. |
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Here she rents a small upstairs apartment in a family's house, and paints. |
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Landlords argue this would result in either fewer properties for rent, or higher rents at all levels of the rental market to offset the risk posed by troublesome tenants. |
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They trailed in limp defeat, their once proud banners torn from the bosom of the sky, and bedecked with many minute rents and holes within their pale canvass. |
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Demand for rentable homes by expatriates and local executives is driving the increase in rents for luxury properties on The Peak, a real estate management firm said. |
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With demand for rentals strong, he's looking to raise rents. |
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The presence of monopoly rents tends to foster rent-seeking behavior. |
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Where the lord of the manor had a demesne farm, the court appointed a reeve to supervise the farming activities, using labour services and collecting rents. |
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Notwithstanding the potential fall-off in the pace of growth, the demand from both local and international retailers remains strong, with new lettings achieving record rents. |
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An increased supply of rental accommodation has resulted in a welcome reprieve from spiralling rents for tenants around the country, and particularly in Dublin. |
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Poon said that because the company is usually the anchor tenant at large shopping malls, rents are slightly lower than those charged for smaller retail companies. |
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We turned inward, stopped investing in ourselves, took in unskilled labour and built a system of protection based on rural rents that made us sclerotic. |
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A series of statutes, beginning in 1915, sought to address this problem, by controlling the rents which could be charged and affording security of tenure to tenants. |
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This lease not only provided Sidebottom with a quarterage on the amount of coal extracted, but also brought the considerable sum of a L50 yearly rent fee and other rents. |
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All I gotta do is print them out, but my rents are sleeping already! |
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Was watching 8 Mile with my rents when all the power went out. |
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Consequently less speculative accommodation is now being provided, which we believe will lead to rents hardening and a build-to-suit market becoming more preeminent. |
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Store rents are also rising as sales soar in ritzy shopping districts. |
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He said existing state house tenants who were paying only 25 per cent of their incomes in rent would be able to stay on the same basis and would not transfer to market rents. |
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Details can be obtained about subsequent rents and the terms of letting. |
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High Rents Are Killing the Restaurant Capital By Will Doig Exorbitant rents, the rise of Brooklyn, lazy millennials. |
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Of course many youngsters go uptown because, with rents skyrocketing downtown, it makes economic sense. |
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Back at Columbia Heights Village, Mary bemoans the rising rents that gentrification has caused. |
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As seller it collects the economic rents inherent in the resource. |
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They obtain economic rents at the expense of taxpayers and consumers who are unorganized, uninformed, and paying costs that are not well defined or conspicuous. |
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With occupancy rates of 95 percent, Billingsly has been able to raise new rents by 15 percent this year. |
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We never saw landlords and used to imagine they were oversized and overdressed and living the high life on the rents they received from their tenants. |
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With sales price gains on high-end flats outstripping rents, investors may be tempted to sell property before prices fall further and redeploy their capital elsewhere. |
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Yeah your rents will rise, yeah posers will start moving in, but oh well. |
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Once they find takings dwindling they will be off and away to pastures new and local traders will not be able to afford the high rents and rates, so lots of empty shops. |
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Third, the collapse of the command economy created private profit opportunities in the form of enormous rents that lured enterprise away from value-adding activity. |
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A second problem is the existence of other types of economic rents that go largely untaxed, which struck the opponents of Henry George as terribly important a century ago. |
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At that time, the practice of annual rents being fixed at auction was replaced with a system of nominal ground rent subject to the payment of a premium. |
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Directly, the explosion in house prices and the sustained increases in rents is driving up the cost of living and exerting pressure on pay demands. |
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This coupled with extortionately high house prices and rents makes it very difficult for those earning the real York average wages to even afford to live. |
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As long as there are institutions with lots of money and an interest in seeking rents and favors, there will be corruption, and more mundane influence peddling. |
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The agitation that he led influenced Gladstone to introduce the 1881 Irish Land Act, guaranteeing fair rents, fixity of tenure, and freedom to sell to tenants. |
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Soon the association was strong enough to boycott local landlords who were evicting their tenants and offering the land to others at increased rents. |
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Landlords in central London, many of whom are Irish, are experiencing a difficult time as residential rents continue to fall due to a slump in corporate lettings. |
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Mr Rooke said some premium retail sites might find it harder to snare tenants at existing rents, but B-grade retail space would be hardest hit by any oversupply. |
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But people in their late 20s and early 30s with above-average salaries can no longer afford a house and are trying to rent, while rents are going through the roof. |
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Land, he asserted, should be owned by the public and government funded by rents. |
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Meanwhile, the older nobility was losing income due to declining rents. |
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The gang plants software bugs in computers that allow it to steal passwords, and it rents out huge networks of computers to others for sending out viruses and spam. |
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Businesses are suffering more each day in an area where the rents are extortionate, and the situation could boil over soon. |
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There are fears rents could spiral forcing them out of business and the clubs demolished for housing if the authority presses ahead with an auction of freeholds next month. |
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He says vacancies are up because rent decontrol allowed landlords to raise rents once tenants left, until they virtually priced themselves out of the market. |
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In Japan, it is customary that a person who rents a room pays a deposit and key money to the owner in addition to the monthly room rent when a contract is made. |
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They rearranged their estates to create larger tenant farms on rack rents, with a decline in small yeomen farmers with customary tenure or freeholds. |
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Collusive labor makes it easier for employers to collude to extract maximum rents from customers. |
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In post-bust New York, rents were comparatively low and so the model worked. |
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The Tudor Government gained further revenue from the clerical lands by receiving rents from confiscated lands and by selling the lands. |
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The rents issuing from the land permitted him to live as a man of independent means. |
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She lamented the rising rents that naturally occur whenever a seedy area of a city begins to gentrify, forcing out some of the mom-and-pop shops. |
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Many Highland landlords were in debt, despite rising commodity prices and the associated farm incomes which allowed higher rents to be charged. |
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At 248 East 49th Street, 11 apartments at this prestigious Turtle Bay location are 100 percent leased with free-market rents. |
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As it stands, there is no self-correcting mechanism available for inflated rents. |
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This in turn led to a decline in public and social services, as people struggled to pay rates and rents. |
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The Borough of Shrewsbury's first Charter was granted by King Henry I allowing the collection of rents. |
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Digita operates the DTT and Mobile Terrestrial networks and rents capacity to broadcasters on its network on a neutral market basis. |
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The seller, Broome Realty Associates, has held the properties for over 20 years and most of the apartments yield low, rent stabilized rents. |
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Somalis, like other immigrants, seek out the area because with the number of old buildings, it is possible to find low rents in the area. |
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I understand these are peppercorn rents and will need to go up and that the council is trying to make savings everywhere. |
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Not only are we getting great rents, but we have wonderful, creditworthy tenants. |
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It was decided that the Cardinal of Spain would hold an enquiry into the tenure of estates and rents acquired during Henry IV's reign. |
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Conditions in 16th century Europe support the view that the separation of constantly rising prices and fixed rents destroyed landowners. |
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The aristocracy could raise rents to increase revenue and not face the full consequences of the Price Revolution. |
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An example would be when someone rents a car to get to a business meeting, but when that person arrives to pick up the car, it is not there. |
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Moreover, by the end of 1868 all male heads of household were enfranchised as a result of the end of compounding of rents. |
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Eventually the farmers agreed to raise wages, and the parsons and some landlords reduced the tithes and rents. |
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Keswick was at the hub of the monastic farms in the area, and Fountains based a steward in the town, where tenants paid their rents. |
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I felt like a home appliance one seldom buys but rents when needed, something like a rug shampooer. |
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Nevertheless, he has always had to pay higher rents than even these for the poorest and most stinted rooms. |
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Many historical real estate cycles show that the overall up-cycle proceeds with long periods of rising rents and occupancy rates. |
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Tenants refused to pay the latest increase in rents and staged mass demonstrations against evictions, resulting in violent confrontations. |
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One, cachaca, closed in mid-March, partly because of rising rents. |
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The brown paint on the door was so old that the naked wood showed between the rents. |
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A BABY boom combined with a housing shortage will send rents and property prices soaring, experts are warning today. |
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In a voyage charter the charterer rents the vessel from the loading port to the discharge port. |
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When looking at outright sale or sale leaseback, investors want credit, lease term, market rents with escalations. |
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Kirklees Metropolitan Development Company Ltd sells and deals in freehold and leasehold ground rents and the letting of properties. |
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Ground rents were initiated in the late 19th Century to extort money from families who built homes or businesses. |
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Iwould not be surprised to hear the tent dwellers at St Paul''s are being charged ground rents. |
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Cash-flows from ground rents are characterized by their first-ranking title over the property and full inflation protection of up to 198 years. |
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Fullholders' grain rents had remained unchanged since 1727, ranging from 3 to 12 bushels per farm. |
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In recent years, rents and availability of accommodation has seen more second and third year students returning to university halls. |
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Many of the new political entities no longer supported their armies through taxes, instead relying on granting them land or rents. |
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These peasants were often subject to noble overlords and owed them rents and other services, in a system known as manorialism. |
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Further problems were lower rents and lower demand for food, both of which cut into agricultural income. |
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Most peasants in Western Europe managed to change the work they had previously owed to their landlords into cash rents. |
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Some economic thinkers emphasize the need to share those rents as an essential requirement for a well functioning market. |
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In the centre itself, a combination of high rents and rising rates have made things difficult for smaller traders. |
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Developers commonly displace the very artists that helped gentrify a market to make way for tenants willing to pay higher rents. |
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He posited that the growth of population and capital, pressing against a fixed supply of land, pushes up rents and holds down wages and profits. |
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They are stuck in a no-win situation where rising rents make it harder to save for the deposit while property prices continue to soar. |
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Another important difference concerns the treatment of property rents, land rents and real estate rents. |
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In 1949, local authorities were empowered to provide people suffering from poor health with public housing at subsidised rents. |
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The middlemen leased large tracts of land from the landlords on long leases with fixed rents, which they then sublet as they saw fit. |
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After leaving school, Lowry began a career working for the Pall Mall Company, later collecting rents. |
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The result hurt the tenants, who paid both higher rents and higher taxes. |
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The use of Egypt's immense land rents to finance the Empire's operations resulted from Augustus' conquest of Egypt and the shift to a Roman form of government. |
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When potato blight hit the island in 1846, much of the rural population was left without food, because cash crops were being exported to pay rents. |
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The Cortes of Toledo of 1480 came to the conclusion that the only hope of lasting financial reform lay in a resumption of these alienated lands and rents. |
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What happens after peppercorn rents for five years or a grant run out? |
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Economic theory suggests the returns to land and other natural resources are economic rents that cannot be reduced in such a way because of their perfect inelastic supply. |
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The Port is a special government entity created by the state legislature in 1962, for which revenue consists of tariffs and rents paid by district tenants. |
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In fact room rents for the week are being offered at exorbitant rates and many apartment owners are happily 'to-letting' their downtown apartments and going to ruralise. |
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It is thought that the king would have travelled throughout his land dispensing justice and authority and collecting rents from his various estates. |
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On the other hand, the price revolution brought impoverishment to those who lived on fixed income and small rents, as their earning could not keep pace with Spanish prices. |
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Pindus said it also does not pay for him to hold out for higher rents. |
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After collecting the king's rents, the Royalists left for Cartmel. |
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There are many vacant properties in all the borough districts and yet they would rather them be boarded up than to give them for peppercorn rents to small business etc. |
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The friendly management picks guests up from their bus, provides shuttle buses into town, hosts free sausage sizzles and rents surfboards, bikes and scooters. |
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The king had ordered an inquiry into the rents and other dues to which the princes had been entitled, and these were enforced by the new officials. |
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Although he rents an apartment and starts forming personal ties and relationships, he has trouble fitting in because of his face blindness, a rare neurological condition. |
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Consider the situation from the perspective of budding rent seekers who hope to gain appropriable rents by way of environmentally based output restrictions. |
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Mr Hopkinson, who runs Flavour Vapour, a shop which sells electronic cigarettes, says some Huddersfield rents are on a par with those in Leeds and York. |
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The LSL Buy to Let Index recently showed rents are increasing and four in five landlords surveyed believe they will continue to do so in the coming year. |
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Moody Street's booming nightlife, convenience to the commuter rail and lower rents have attracted younger professionals to Waltham in growing numbers in recent years. |
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Parliament passed laws in 1870, 1881, 1903 and 1909 that enabled most tenant farmers to purchase their lands, and lowered the rents of the others. |
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Taxpayers that co-own real property often lease the property and share in the rents, as well as the costs and expenses of maintaining the property. |
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Derek Lutton and Bill Beckett found falling Conacre rents encouraged landowners to seek sources of income other than letting land to neighbouring farmers. |
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After contractors are paid, all government taxes, rates and ground rents paid, our trust has no net income from our hospital sites' parking charges. |
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The landlord could try and avoid bankruptcy by introducing immediate improvements, putting up rents, clearing tenants to allow higher paying sheep farmers to be installed. |
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But as landlords increased rents protests by tenants became more frequent. |
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Rents remained high in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore where there was a limited amount of retail space available, it said. |
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Rents appear to have levelled off and are now holding steady in all locations. |
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Rents and taxes from the offshore sector make up the bulk of the income of the State. |
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Rents were horrendous for urban dwellers, with entire families doubling up in crowded single room tenements. |
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Rents were raised by 15 to 20 per cent at several stores when the leases were renewed recently. |
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Rents first dipped below inflation in June 2013 and continued on a trend of below-inflation increases up until last month, LSL said. |
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