Sentences with phrase «much difference in the long run»

It doesn't make much difference in the long run, but if you're able to catch just one good film that you wouldn't have otherwise seen during a busier season, then it's a win - win for everyone involved.

Not exact matches

In the long run, it wouldn't make much difference to the nation's fiscal situation, but to households on the edge, it might make a very significant difference.
Because mortgages are such big dollar amounts — the Mortgage Bankers Association reported the average loan request in March 2017 hit an all - time high at $ 313,300 — even a fraction of a percentage point can make a big difference in your monthly payment and how much you will spend on your home in the long run.
That's why I think that having free formula in the hospital ultimately doesn't make much of a difference in the long run.
Update, Feb. 25, 2016: This post has been updated to clarify that the suggestion that breastfeeding won't make much of a difference in an individual child's life in the long run comes from other studies, not from Howe - Heyman and Lutenbacher.
But on an individual basis, breastfeeding is just one of many factors that affect a child's health, and some studies suggest it probably won't make much of a difference in an individual child's life in the long run.
Although some of you might argue that this figure is not much, in the long run it can account for the difference in truly muscular body and an average one.
I personally don't think there is too much of a difference between the two (or not enough to matter in the long run at least) but you be the judge.
But it didn't make that much of a difference in the long run.
A job loss can hurt, but if you are relatively young and have a lot saved already, the loss of a few months of retirement contributions won't make too much of a difference in the long run.
The 30 and 15 - year loans are structured much the same way, but the subtle differences in their terms could make a big difference for you in the long run.
Considering the brief duration of most car loans (48 to 72 months compared to a 30 - year home loan, for example), a single interest rate increase isn't likely to make much of a difference on your monthly car payments or expenses in the long run.
Putting your money into a Term policy and the difference into an IRA or increase your 401K contribution is much smarter in the long run..
A $ 30 difference isn't much in the long run, but money saved is money saved.
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