He also wants to bolster revenues from hot growth areas such as direct marketing and Web-based communications. |
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Because we've done the math on this before, we'll leave it alone and assume that the president is counting on a huge surge in revenues. |
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Because its revenues do not cover all its costs, the utility has had to obtain working capital from short-term bank advances. |
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When income tax and excise revenues are not delivering, then it is time to call a halt on gratuitous payments to the public sector. |
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These revenues would be exclusively earmarked for financing the mass rapid transit system in the form of government subsidies. |
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Increased revenues could be raised by such a tax without a significant danger of fiscal flight, disincentive effects, or unacceptable costs. |
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The new, so-called ratable model recognizes software-license revenues over the life of a contract. |
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This figure is based on the supposed monetary value of the music files copied, not on actual loss of revenues to the industry. |
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Some of these businesses might even go under as a result of failing to cope with a sudden downturn in revenues. |
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The company had to wait six months to reapply for a licence and in the meantime it remained with no revenues and continued to generate debt. |
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This costs us hundreds of millions of dollars annually in tax revenues which could be used for our ailing health care system. |
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Many Wall Street analysts do not understand how lowering airfares will raise revenues. |
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A growing number of states are in deficit as declining business profits reduce tax receipts and other revenues. |
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The charter also granted one bailiff the powers of king's escheator, with any fines or revenues from escheated goods going towards the farm. |
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Even when the economy recovers fully from the recession, those revenues won't return. |
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General agreement was reported on oil revenues, questions of tax and excise duties and wealth distribution. |
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In Piedmont and Naples the nobles were the principal beneficiaries from the alienations of tax revenues and demesne lands. |
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Vast revenues from the sale of oil accrue to a politically shaky and unrepresentative national government. |
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Between 1950 and 1958, total oil revenues leaped from 5.3 million Iraqi dinars to 79.9 million Iraqi dinars. |
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This strategy is helping the prison system to outlast current budget constraints so it can re-emerge once state revenues recover. |
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Tax rates will be raised but revenues will not rise proportionately or at all. |
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Short on revenues, the company had high fixed costs, including rent for office space, furniture, and computers. |
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What proportion of tax revenues must government spend in order to collect those taxes? |
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They finally had enough revenues to cover their fixed costs and marketing expenses. |
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The 25 per cent year-on-year jump in revenues was also in line with expectations. |
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If his reported revenues were to be believed he alone was contributing a surprisingly large proportion of the revenues of the Group as a whole. |
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Advertising revenues will be under pressure from below-the-line activity like PR, direct marketing, multimedia and sales promotion. |
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Printing and reprographic services accounted for 53 percent of the company's 2001 revenues. |
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Market revenues are ploughed back into the market-strong areas or used to augment the corporate side of university operations. |
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Instead, they were handled several layers down in the organization by people with clear and strong incentives to maximize revenues. |
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The linkage between a tight ruling circle and the military coupled with oil revenues in the successive regimes created authoritarian leaderships. |
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The company reported strong profit margins in its fourth quarter results, although revenues were below expectations. |
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The impost called annates involved the surrender of one-half of revenues during the first year of office by each new episcopal incumbent. |
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It resuscitated the home-building industry, ended the shortage of dwelling units, alleviated civic panic, and boosted municipal revenues. |
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State legislatures are looking at ways to increase state revenues to fill budget deficits. |
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Stock options are on their way to being expensed, which will cut income-tax revenues. |
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It is assumed that teams set ticket prices to maximize revenues for the organization. |
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It would allow De Cairos to keep control of the company and at the same time would allow it to raise substantial revenues. |
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On one hand, a slow-down in economic growth and tax revenues will have an adverse effect. |
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And by reducing the costs and increasing the benefits of operating legally, they can increase public tax revenues. |
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Those efforts produced more investment and high economic growth that boosted tax revenues. |
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Naturally, Feldstein claims that abolishing the estate tax would actually increase total tax revenues. |
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This means the annual cost of public sector pensions is met from current revenues. |
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The golden rule means that tax revenues should pay for public spending, so the chancellor should only borrow money to invest. |
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So while faster growth raises payroll tax revenues, it also drives up benefits. |
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The government's net tax revenues are expected to exceed the Budget target by Rs 3,370 crore. |
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The high-tech boom meant that people worked more, output increased, incomes climbed and tax revenues followed suit. |
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Annual tax revenues are projected at 60 million leva, including 15 million leva in real estate tax. |
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With audit fees shrinking to a sliver of overall revenues, accountants had even less incentive to ride herd on their clients. |
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While revenues for Internet companies can grow exponentially, operating costs tend to grow linearly. |
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In these cases, the companies' revenues were divided in half and apportioned between the two countries. |
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The exceptionally strong revenues we have seen over the first six months of 2000 have changed the landscape. |
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Fierce price competition from rivals coupled with sluggish overall demand led to the stagnating revenues of the past three fiscal years. |
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It will fight the case that you are actually an employee and it will attempt to recover lost revenues. |
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Controlling both expenditures and revenues is fiscal prudence, something you promised. |
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The various state governments' reluctance to switch over to VAT was stemmed by the fear of loss of revenues. |
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With weak economic growth squeezing fiscal revenues, he was forced to announce a sharp increase in public borrowing in November. |
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The key assumptions used to estimate expenditures and revenues also are quite conservative. |
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Both parties combine calls for greater regional autonomy with demands for a larger share of tax revenues for themselves. |
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At the same time, Beijing has also lost flexibility in pursuing fiscal policy due to its loss of revenues from provincial authorities. |
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He has five years left at the helm of a government awash with oil revenues. |
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That might cause big mailers to move to alternatives even faster, triggering a spiral of falling revenues, rising debt, and declining service. |
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A recent study by the US General Accounting Office tells us that in 1949, 47 per cent of all fiscal revenues were collected from corporations. |
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But that would still involve taxation to channel these revenues into public spending. |
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Poorer nations are losing 270 billion a year in revenues to prosperous tax dodgers. |
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Western banks were glutted with revenues from oil-producing countries as oil prices rose. |
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The target is moderate, considering that tax revenues have increased by an average 14.2 percent per annum over the past three years. |
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The impact of this on telecoms and mobile cellular operator voice revenues promises to be interesting. |
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In terms of both shipments and revenues, 2002 will be backloaded to the final two quarters of the year. |
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There could be some pleasant news with respect to operating profits as revenues continue to grow and margins increase. |
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As with test publishers, the scramble to boost revenues sometimes leads test-prep companies to violate ethical standards. |
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He is going to be in your face, pushing the norm, scratching for revenues, defying you to slap him down and shut him up. |
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But now a collapsing bubble transforms ballooning revenues into ballooning budget deficits. |
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The drop in revenues between the fourth quarter and the first quarter of this year is bang in line with the trend of the past three years. |
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If dues or registration fees are paid in advance, the recognition of the revenues is deferred. |
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The economic slowdown in the US has led to a precipitous drop in tax revenues for states and municipalities. |
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The United States Joint Economic Committee recently proposed a simple formula for sharing revenues from seigniorage as follows. |
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But that means we may have dip into Social Security revenues, or maybe raise taxes, or go into deficit spending. |
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Since most phone companies share revenues with service providers, rogue diallers seem to make good money. |
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There was evidence of healthy like-for-like growth in both revenues and gross profit. |
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Because most revenues came from import duties, he had to fashion a customs service and build buoys, beacons, and lighthouses. |
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The budget deficit is the shortfall between the government's income, such as tax revenues, and its level of spending. |
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I'm sure the tax collectors will find a way to make sure that government revenues are not depleted. |
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To finance such work, the republic is allowed to keep the revenues from its oil production around Grozny. |
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Demands on the public purse continue to grow and tax revenues are depleted. |
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Hence, the play-in game would be considered part of the tourney, and participants would receive a full share of tournament revenues. |
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Foreign investment has fallen by two thirds and revenues from tourism have halved, undermining Israel's currency, the shekel. |
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All of which, of course, is above and beyond the normal tax revenues they collect. |
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Currently these businesses contribute a minuscule amount to the total revenues. |
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One profit measure was net farm income from operations, calculated as total revenues minus total costs. |
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And that, in turn, is what provides revenues to the federal treasury, which enable you then to pay for things. |
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Investigators determined that the company consistently misreported revenues, providing an unduly rosy picture to investors. |
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Some have doubled or tripled the share of their overall revenues generated by sales abroad to 30, 40 and even 50 percent. |
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You negotiate successfully with your parent nation to run the industry yourself, supply its needs, trouser the revenues. |
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We now get almost 20 percent of our revenues from internal sales of products and services to our members. |
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Future plans include moving the shop from its underground location to the street frontage to increase exhibition space and to ginger up revenues. |
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The property of this country is absolutely concentred in a very few hands, having revenues of from half a million of guineas a year downwards. |
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The company has struggled to gain any momentum in revenues and growth since. |
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This is despite many of the large hotels expecting big revenues through hugely inflated hotel charges. |
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It generates revenues by hosting online backgammon, gin rummy and blackjack, as well as staging golf, darts and pool games. |
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The turf war for control of betting revenues in Australia's biggest State is turning nasty. |
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State higher-education construction, as well as other categories, will benefit from a pickup in state general-fund revenues. |
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The authors focus on the increasing cost of war as an explanation of the Portuguese shift from domain revenues to direct and indirect taxation. |
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He also proposed a sinking fund, financed by post office revenues, that would be pledged to pay off the debt. |
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Striking workers and the local population have commandeered over three dozen oil wells to force negotiations for a bigger share of oil revenues. |
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Tax revenues collected from imports and exports of goods this year are expected to be lower than the government's earlier target. |
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For the record, investors warned last month that while the economy was growing strongly, tax revenues continue to undershoot. |
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Districts in poor municipalities rely on property tax revenues supplemented by state aid to complete their local budgets. |
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Lending will expand at a faster rate because the lower interest rates are eating into banks' revenues from government bonds. |
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He said using the new billing system, councils would be able to keep track of their collectable revenues. |
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Customised education will play an increasingly important role in boosting revenues on both sides of the Atlantic. |
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The power plant uses the revenues from credits to fund cogeneration with the excess steam it generates. |
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Mr Straw said legal safeguards were in place to stop oil revenues being seized by another country for unpaid debts. |
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And still unquantified is the impact of fiscal decentralization on central government revenues and spending obligations. |
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The bank also predicts a sharp deterioration in the public finances as growth and tax revenues fail to meet government expectations. |
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We mostly adopted trade sales to maximize revenues, and they were generally clean, despite occasional slip ups. |
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Doubtless city hall will ask Washington to replace lost tax revenues, but the Feds should adamantly refuse. |
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He said revenues from the deals meant the loss-making firm would not have to seek new funding before it breaks even next year. |
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He said the break-even plan was based on the assumption that revenues would not fall significantly from their current levels. |
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Solvency implies that the present value of government disbursements should not exceed the present value of revenues. |
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He obtained the right to consult the churchwardens' accounts, as well as those of the administrators of the goods and revenues of the poor. |
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The new title began selling advertising space cheaply, eating into the revenues from the other titles. |
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Nonusers of the HOV lanes also benefit from this project because revenues are used to support the operation of a new express bus service. |
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Future education hiring will be constrained by tight state and local budgets as tax revenues fall off. |
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Over 50 per cent of its revenues come from the U.S., on the back of cheaper generics. |
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The revenues for the future are showing a greater degree of buoyancy and I think we now have to focus on health, education and social welfare. |
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The project clearly seems non-secular in nature and I feel a little uncomfortable having tax revenues go to that purpose. |
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With the economy in a nosedive and tax revenues plummeting, the only way to balance the budget was to drastically cut government spending. |
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States, including California, have been deriving significant revenues from the federal estate tax credit for state death taxes. |
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The market was supervised by a warden and by the fifteenth century that officer was farming revenues due the city from the market. |
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However, revenues are expected to grow at over 100 per cent per annum for the next three years. |
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But it noted stronger foreign revenues would offset the weak stateside results. |
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They can attract dial-up users without cannibalizing existing broadband revenues. |
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Embezzlement of oil revenues, bribery, and ethnic favoritism are all common practices. |
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As products hit the market and revenues pick up, that patience should be rewarded handsomely. |
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Some governments gave pirates and privateers safe harbor to earn revenues or to harass their enemies. |
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The camp could also boost revenues by adding off-season weekend sessions and leasing camp facilities to religious and nonprofit groups. |
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Every year, the Fund gives every Alaska citizen an equal slice of revenues from oil drilling on state lands. |
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Once again, one-time sources of revenues are expected to keep budget deficits down. |
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In the nine years since his business opened, O'Malley says his revenues have increased about 30 percent each year. |
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Drug trafficking is responsible for an estimated 30 to 40 percent of organized crime revenues. |
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Certainly a strong recovery and a rising stock market will increase tax revenues. |
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More than half of revenues was generated from the outfit's directories business. |
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Over 70 per cent of the company's revenues and 54 per cent of orders were from Asia where a majority of the subcontract test houses are located. |
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Son is hoping to turbocharge revenues by getting his broadband subscribers hooked on services such as games that bring in extra cash. |
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Businesses did not make explicit depreciation charges against their revenues during this period. |
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Architects contemplating their first hires should do a budget based on revenues and operating costs plus the projected salaries. |
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William inherited a financial system which brought him the income from royal lands, the revenues from justice, and his dues as overlord. |
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According to him, within the 2001 budget the revenues will be redistributed without overshooting the planned budget deficit. |
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The summary graph, on page 35, reproduced here, does indeed show Scotland at the low end of the spectrum of business tax revenues. |
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Schenden credits a robust economy, as well as superior products rolling off the assembly line, for helping to boost revenues. |
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The backers had overestimated the site's ability to convert page views into revenues, a fundamental error made by many dot-coms, she says. |
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He says cheap borrowing and the regular revenues from rental has helped keep debt gearing well within limits. |
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Nonetheless, revenues from pre-emptive purchases of Maori land were the mainstay of the Crown government's budget. |
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The motive is to destroy all those in the south who might threaten the oil revenues that sustain the regime's grip. |
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Consistent with this principle, we should avoid payroll taxes and employer mandates in favor of social provision based on general revenues. |
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Like many other dotcoms it's been hit by the economic downturn and the global decline in advertising revenues. |
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With the transformation still in its early stages revenues are expected to decline. |
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The king retained his influence over elections to abbacies and bishoprics, and continued to receive their revenues during vacancies. |
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But Reagan realized immediately that no amount of budget cutting could make up for the shortfall in revenues. |
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The funds were to be used to reimburse city departments for lost revenues for fee waivers granted to applicants. |
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They're washing their hands of the problem but also guaranteeing the landlords get their revenues, which are, of course, a form of tax revenue. |
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There is a commitment to set up a National Transformation Fund if significant once-off revenues accrue from the sale of state assets. |
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In this the United States and Saudi Arabia, with its considerable oil revenues, were on the same wavelength. |
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That means that once they reach critical mass, their profit margins fatten as revenues grow. |
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We expect 2003 to be a year of reasonable but not spectacular growth in economic activity and business revenues. |
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If the revenues have been going down, the cost of operating the world's largest network of railways has been steadily inching upwards. |
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A crash in the world price of coffee diminished government revenues and disrupted the local economy. |
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Property ad valorem taxes are the major source of revenues for state and municipal governments. |
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After all, the city contributes a major share to the State's revenues. |
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However, the lure of increased tax revenues is evidently not enough to overcome misgivings about permitting the world's oldest profession equal status on today's job market. |
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Convincing the ivory tower decision-makers may take quite an effort if they choose to share TV revenues. |
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Yet even with housing sales and prices cooling off and online competitors nibbling at the situation's vacant revenues, he is looking to acquire more newspapers. |
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Last year interactive services overtook traditional direct marketing and media advertising in a big way as the primary source of billings and revenues at Digitas. |
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Insurance brokerages typically sell for 1 to 1.5 times annual revenues. |
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The algorithm is forever ratcheting up spending and ratcheting down revenues. |
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The spending and revenues produced by this algorithm are very hard to predict. |
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Colonies were expected to be financially self-supporting and their revenues consequently often bore the heavy costs of defence and the campaigns of conquest. |
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The theory is that traditional bricks and mortar banks will suffer a loss of customers and revenues as internet banks encroach on their territory. |
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But in the meantime, we'll be looking towards licensing, merchandising, sponsorship, product placement, and other applications to bring us revenues offline. |
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Woodward is supposing that the supercommittee was the only place for discussions about a bargain including revenues. |
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The traders, already feeling persecuted by the new system, rose in revolt against proposed restrictions, citing increased costs at a time of reduced revenues. |
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If they were privy to inside information about revenues looking weak, is that a problem? |
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The company said circulation revenues continue to show solid advances on 2002, reflecting the impact of both cover price increases and market share gains. |
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On the positive side, Spanish-language newspaper circulation has nearly quadrupled over the past 13 years and advertising revenues are up sevenfold. |
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Even if merchandising income were to double the star's revenues, at current levels the company stands to take back around half what they have paid out. |
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To extricate himself, he surrendered to the government the management of, and revenues from, most of his property. |
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But they do not include the revenues of middlemen and retailers. |
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Because many biotechnology firms do not have any revenues and their assets are usually intangible, the best measure of firm size in this industry is a headcount. |
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Uneven distribution of the religious revenues transformed a segment of clerics into entrepreneurs who purchased real estate and invested in other financial institutions. |
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Copyright owners considered that this encouraged copyright infringement and affected revenues as it enabled subscribers to copy the records onto cassette tape. |
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The monetary union insures that dutiable revenues are distributed fairly. |
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Suddenly, it's summer, and the ratings meters are turned off, which means stations don't give a stuff because their previous advertising revenues aren't affected. |
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In addition to the revenues from numerous lands in the Ile-de-France, in Brittany and the south, he earned an estimated 25,000 ecus per year from his royal offices. |
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Second, proprietors' equities at the end of the year equaled proprietors' equities at the beginning of the year plus revenues and minus expenses for the year. |
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Legalisation would bring in huge tax revenues for the state. |
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Several local governments started issuing forest concession licenses since the implementation of regional autonomy last year as part of efforts to boost their revenues. |
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The business plan is to use all that calumny and controversy to make money off news-stand sales but it doesn't seem to be working and ad revenues are small. |
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In its recent quarter, Goldman showed massive declines in its trading revenues of both bonds and equities, 20 to 30 percent. |
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In 1100 he enjoyed the revenues of three bishoprics and 12 abbeys. |
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Also, programs designed to help low-income families are always the first on the chopping block when state revenues go down. |
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There has been a substantial loss of oil revenues, the underpinning of their economy. |
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The company says revenues are expected to jump tenfold this year. |
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Companies have long looked at their overseas revenues as gravy and, as such, have largely overlooked the Web sites managed by their overseas Web teams. |
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Ginger reported that the authority's own studies showed that lower fares would actually result in increased ridership and increased revenues, with no increase in costs. |
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Not only had circulation increased throughout the Deseret News's disastrous go-for-broke circulation campaign of 1947-52, but so had advertising linage and revenues. |
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The catalyst was the Roman procurator's demand for 100,000 denarii from the Temple treasury, probably to make up a shortfall in revenues caused by a tax strike. |
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The department said it was still too early to say if the improvement in the public finances would continue as some of the increase in tax revenues were from one-off items. |
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At the same time, the International Olympic Committee has spent money from its Solidarity Fund, channeling some TV revenues to athletes in countries where they need help. |
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Land revenue, despite its sluggish growth in the past, does hold tremendous promise for augmentation of the State's revenues if handled judiciously and with determination. |
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That would raise the much-needed revenues to replenish public coffers, thereby preventing future budget cuts. |
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And predictions of continued lower tourism dollars could also hurt, as an estimated 20 per cent of restaurant revenues come from wandering sightseers. |
|
Excises, tariffs, export duties, and taxes on particular goods have become relatively insignificant sources of state revenues in these advanced nations. |
|
Meanwhile, a look inside the numbers suggests USPS is actually doing a better job aligning its revenues with its spending. |
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While, the countries of southeast Asia are counting the cost of the cataclysm, their economies are forecast to be further negatively impacted by the loss of tourism revenues. |
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Thus the adoption of true free trade involves the abolition of all indirect taxation of whatever kind, and the resort to direct taxation for all public revenues. |
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Owners might be concerned about lost revenues if the preseason were shortened, but losing a marquee player certainly doesn't help the league put its best product on the field. |
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This is explained by the heavy decline in total export revenues during 1986 and severe contraction in the Jordanian export commodities other than phosphate. |
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That drove their revenues sharply negative at the same time as the collapse of the stock market bubble knocked the stuffing out of their pension fund. |
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They argue that even if deferred taxes are undercounted, the sum is too small to affect the enormous fiscal gap projected between long-term revenues and outlays. |
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More broadly, it can allow firms in mature markets to grow their revenues far more rapidly than they could by hewing to their existing lines of business. |
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Hard lessons were learned during the dot-com bubble, and that means that only established companies with significant revenues. |
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But if it drives readers even further away from old-fashioned newsprint, it could inadvertently send revenues into freefall. |
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The result was a decade of vigorous sales, during which labels merely repackaged the same music into ever more expensive collections and sat back to count the revenues. |
|
For their part, rural councils often suspect the city wants to get its hands on the tax revenues by rapidly-expanding rural subdivision and settlements. |
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Unlike Snapchat, for example, dropbox has significant revenues and a clear plan to get more. |
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At the other end of the social scale were the king and a tiny group of powerful men, all of them rentiers who lived in style on the revenues of their great estates. |
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The moves come in an effort to increase revenue in a year which will see the economy slow considerably, bringing sluggish tax revenues and vastly reduced consumer spending. |
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It is a cash cow, handed billions by TV networks and rewarding its sponsors with huge ratings and ever growing revenues. |
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This being said, revenues related to online gaming have been, to date, negligible, but this may be small change if online gaming really takes off. |
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The reason that aggregate profit does not decline is that, in the aggregate, total sales revenues and total productive expenditures, or costs, remain the same. |
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That would help the company raise revenues while complying with its market-share ceiling and going for more attractive high-margin corporate customers. |
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Conversely, the Inland analysis reinforces other research that shows that disinvesting in the product is predictive of declining circulation and revenues. |
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Crooks direct these illicit revenues to separate accounts in the hope they'll be able to draw out a sizable wedge by the time their ruse is rumbled. |
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Service providers haven't completely snapped their wallets shut, but the emphasis for the near-term will be on controlled spending as they look for ways to grow revenues. |
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By most estimates, after this fight he will trail only Mayweather in pay-per-view revenues. |
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Some actors feel the studios are unwilling to take chances with these huge global revenues by taking risks in casting. |
|
In the prime of manhood at 43, Simon runs a company closing in on half a billion dollars in revenues, with a market cap twice that, up from next to nothing eight years ago. |
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Collectively, we have managed to deliver expensive fish at a reasonable price while at the same time generating significant revenues for stakeholders. |
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In an industry filled with as much hype and hoopla as the dotcom world in its heyday, Biogen is a company with products, revenues, profits, and prospects. |
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Future revenues were mortgaged against advances at usurious rates. |
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A package of further measures would be introduced to rebalance revenues, by congestion charging and road tolls which would be ring-fenced for public transport. |
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We feel that the launch of these products, all including Acemannan Hydrogel, will enhance the brand equity and revenues of both companies. |
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From 1984, the economy was helped by the inflow of substantial North Sea oil revenues. |
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The choir at the wedding included Attalus, a puppet emperor without revenues or soldiers. |
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The duke travelled constantly around the duchy, confirming charters and collecting revenues. |
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England and Normandy were well administered and therefore would be able to generate larger revenues than areas such as Aquitaine. |
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The revenues from the customs duty were handled by the Riccardi, a group of bankers from Lucca in Italy. |
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In 1294, Edward made a demand of a grant of one half of all clerical revenues. |
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Then, from 1336 onwards, a series of schemes aimed at increasing royal revenues from wool export were introduced. |
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Castile provided the Spanish crown with most of its revenues and its best troops. |
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In 1625, Olivares proposed the Union of Arms, which aimed at raising revenues from the Indies for imperial defense, which met strong opposition. |
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This meant there was less need for large tax revenues and so the taxation systems decayed. |
|
The revenues of the Duchy form part of the Privy Purse, and are used for expenses not borne by the parliamentary grants. |
|
Central government revenues come primarily from income tax, National Insurance contributions, value added tax, corporation tax and fuel duty. |
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Income tax forms the single largest source of revenues collected by the government. |
|
Central government revenues are mainly income tax, national insurance contributions, value added tax, corporation tax and fuel duty. |
|
This work is designed to promote the location to tourists and drive additional revenues into a tax base. |
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Public finance is the field of economics that deals with budgeting the revenues and expenditures of a public sector entity, usually government. |
|
Although Anselm retained his nominal title, William immediately seized the revenues of his bishopric and retained them til death. |
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When a film is highly exploitable as a commercial property, its ancillary revenues can dwarf its income from direct film sales. |
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Pooh videos, soft toys, and other merchandise generate substantial annual revenues for Disney. |
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Racetrack owners, horse trainers and state governments sometimes receive a cut of ADW revenues. |
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The party argued that the revenues from the oil were not benefitting Scotland as much as they should. |
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The island is in customs union with the UK, and related revenues are pooled and shared under the Common Purse Agreement. |
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This means that the Isle of Man cannot have the lower excise revenues on alcohol and other goods that are enjoyed in the Channel Islands. |
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The SNP believes that a portion of the revenues should be invested in a sovereign oil fund. |
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Government revenues contracted as national income fell, while the cost of assisting the jobless rose. |
|
In France, and most other countries, the counterpart fund money was absorbed into general government revenues, and not recycled as in Germany. |
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More money was spent on welfare because more money circulated in the economy and because government revenues increased. |
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The discovery of North Sea oil in the 1970s significantly boosted Shetland's economy, employment and public sector revenues. |
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Shetland's access to oil revenues has funded the Shetland Charitable Trust, which in turn funds a wide variety of local programmes. |
|
These developments contributed to the 1980s oil glut, which affected the Soviet Union, as oil was the main source of Soviet export revenues. |
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Most government budgets are calculated on a cash basis, meaning that revenues are recognized when collected and outlays are recognized when paid. |
|
From 2000 to 2007, revenues from rating structured financial instruments increased more than fourfold. |
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The exploitation of North Sea gas and oil brought in substantial tax and export revenues to aid the new economic boom. |
|
Single-payer systems tend to rely heavily on general tax revenues, whereas multipayer systems generally employ payroll-tax financing. |
|
The revenues they generate supplement the licence fee in financing the UK services. |
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The new kingdom was reliant on limited agriculture and pilgrimage revenues. |
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The vast wealth generated by oil revenues was beginning to have an even greater impact on Saudi society. |
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In the 1990s, Saudi Arabia experienced a significant contraction of oil revenues combined with a high rate of population growth. |
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It has also been argued that, by taxing banned substances, some US states are able to gain additional revenues. |
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Furthermore, governments are unhappy with lost tax revenue and foreign exchange revenues. |
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Furthermore, the government of Ethiopia is purportedly unhappy with lost tax revenue and foreign exchange revenues. |
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Low taxes helped the Roman aristocracy increase their wealth, which equalled or exceeded the revenues of the central government. |
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The motor fuel revenue data reported by the States may include small amounts of revenues generated from the nonhighway use of motor fuel. |
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The nonmail revenues of this carrier relative to those of other trunkline carriers had improved significantly in later years. |
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The network of county sheriffs had collapsed, and with it the ability to raise taxes and collect royal revenues. |
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An increase in FDI may be associated with improved economic growth due to the influx of capital and increased tax revenues for the host country. |
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However, only parts of the canal route were completed because the expected revenues required to complete the entire project were never generated. |
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Its customs revenues amounted at times to a third of the English government's revenue, with wool being the most important element by far. |
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Both states were competing for preeminence in the Persian Gulf and using increased revenues to fund expanded militaries. |
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Using his increased revenues, Philip was the first Capetian king to build a French navy actively. |
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Japan ranks 27th of 189 countries in the 2014 ease of doing business index and has one of the smallest tax revenues of the developed world. |
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As a result, the tax revenues collected by the samurai landowners were worth less and less over time. |
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He would be entitled to 10 percent of all the revenues from the new lands in perpetuity. |
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He would be entitled to ten per cent of all the revenues from the new lands in perpetuity. |
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Matters escalated, with Anselm going back into exile and Henry confiscating the revenues of his estates. |
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By the end of 2012, Adidas was reporting their highest revenues ever and Chief Executive Herbert Hainer expressed optimism for the year ahead. |
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With such massive population drops caused by the Black Death, the tax revenues from this industry greatly diminished. |
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