Those who do find work
often make little money — too little to repay their debts from the program.
Not exact matches
I have
often said that if you
make an investment and you feel OK, you will
make OK returns; if you feel good, you will likely lose
money; and if you felt a
little queasy, you will likely
make money.
Decline the option if you have the chance —
making it a
little more difficult to spend
money is
often all it takes to skip unnecessary purchases.
Francis said during a homily on Saturday to mark Epiphany that people «
often make do» with having «health, a
little money and a bit of entertainment».
It's the fear of these things that
make parents so susceptible to marketing, spending (
often wasting)
money on the latest gadgets and basically living our lives doing everything we can to prevent something bad, and encourage something good happening to the
little people entrusted to us.
Let me point to 10 things that I sketched out this morning: too much
money spent on administration and bureaucracy and not enough on front - line patient care; too
little patient - centric information to inform decision
making; too
little innovation; too
little clinical input into decision
making; too much inertia and hostility to reform, as we have seen today; too much process - driven target culture distorting clinical decision
making; falling productivity; poor outcomes across a range of clinical indicators; too
often, weak commissioning of servicing; and widening health inequalities in the past 10 years, in addition to the scandals that occurred in Staffordshire and Kent.
It is typical for young boys like Dennis from Uganda to
make their own toys out of recycled materials such as bottles, tyres and plastic bags as there
often is
little money to buy them.
They would
often make more
money doing it that way, if they were willing to risk a
little capital up front that is, the tools for creating everything up to the point of physical printing were cheap, easy to use and widely available, the only advantage we really held was the working capital to print, ship and distribute books (and for local books, the shipping and distribution was not THAT important).
This started a fun conversation, about how the people that work the hardest are
often the least well compensated, and the people that
make the most
money are
often doing very
little in the way of work.
Questions like how much
money you spend monthly, your employment history and what bank accounts you have and in what condition,
often make you feel a
little invaded.
So,
often in a bankruptcy the creditors get very
little money, in a proposal you're voluntarily saying I «m going to pay you some of what I owe, something is always better than nothing, which is why they
make sense.
You are trading too
often because you have an intense desire to
make money, and you are risking too much because you think «if I just get ahead a
little bit then I will start managing risk properly».
There's
little risk of losing
money with cash equivalents, and you
often know how much you'll
make.
When I introduce myself to people and explain what I do, they
often believe that our job is to fire people and
make sure they get as
little money as possible.
Because
often a
little amount of
money (and a good credit score) can
make a huge difference in the short - term and save tens of thousands of dollars for someone in the long - term.
Often the information offered is for sale, with the promise that you can
make a lot of
money with
little effort once you know «the secret formula».
If we have to offer lender credits without raising the rate, we
often end up
making little to no
money for our efforts.