We could take 11 million
people out of paying income tax.
We've already taken 900,000
people out of paying any income tax.
Not exact matches
People do better work when they're reminded
of times they excelled previously, so it
pays to dish
out plenty
of praise
The key to successful integration, Simpson adds, is support from an internal or external facilitator (usually
paid for — directly or indirectly —
out of federal assistance for companies that hire
people with disabilities).
Furthermore, the CBO expects the Senate's health bill to substantially raise Americans»
out -
of - pocket medical costs by slashing Obamacare's mandated benefits and rolling back assistance to poorer and sicker
people, as well as discouraging some low - income Americans from buying insurance in the first place (the BCRA would nix Obamacare's requirement that
people carry coverage or
pay a fine).
Sort by median salary to find the jobs with the fattest
pay cheques; sort by five - year wage growth to see which fields have the fastest - growing salaries — that can indicate a shortage
of qualified candidates (and opportunity for you); or sort by five - year growth in the number
of people in the field — those are the places that have been on hiring sprees (but watch
out; that doesn't mean they'll continue the streak).
How many
people did Apple put
out of work this week, when the tech giant announced the Apple Watch and the Apple
Pay point -
of - sale technology built into the new iPhone 6?
I figured
people would
pay if I could take the work
out of it for them.
Cramton knew the accounting troubles were getting
out of hand, but he was opposed to «
paying people too much money to watch our money,» he says, adding: «I didn't want to spend $ 2,000 to save $ 1,000.»
A market researcher is
paid a large sum
of money to go
out on the street and ask
people at random to rate the ads, asking them which one they find most attractive, most likely to create trust, most likely to appeal to older
people, and so on.
After his early customers weren't
paying their invoices, the founder
of pizza app Slice began the long process
of figuring
out what (and how)
people were willing to
pay.
«For
people who have the risk tolerance, investing that money rather than
paying off the mortgage is fine, but think about what would happen if the investments don't pan
out and you still have to
pay your mortgage,» says Craig Brimhall, vice president
of Wealth Strategies at Ameriprise Financial.
There's a blog for a product that doesn't really exist yet, a growing number
of early adopters who are waiting, like you, for the app to come
out; you're commissioning great content and
paying out of pocket for it, and shopping around for an office space because your data is telling you that as soon as you get the product
out,
people will be positively chomping at the bit to get to it.
People will own and trade small digital slices
of everything from real estate, to cars, to houses, to patents, to stocks, to artwork — many
of which may programmatically
pay out dividends via software - defined «smart» contracts.
For one, Warren pointed
out, 7.5 million
people have signed up for the free year
of credit monitoring that Equifax offered following the breach, but after that, they will have to
pay Equifax $ 17 a month to continue the service.
In any case, it's generally a good investment
of the modest amount
of time it takes to
pay attention and be polite unless the
people pitching haven't done their homework, don't appreciate or want to hear about the magnitude or difficulty
of what they're setting
out to do, or just aren't really prepared to effectively present and defend their ideas.
People might not even think of this, but there are people who work in tech but are low - paid, like cafeteria workers and custodial staff, and a lot of them also live out of their cars because they just can't afford being in ho
People might not even think
of this, but there are
people who work in tech but are low - paid, like cafeteria workers and custodial staff, and a lot of them also live out of their cars because they just can't afford being in ho
people who work in tech but are low -
paid, like cafeteria workers and custodial staff, and a lot
of them also live
out of their cars because they just can't afford being in housing.
Pierlot wrote a paper for the CD Howe Institute in 2011 showing that a
person with a salary
of $ 75,000 at the end
of a 35 - year career would accumulate more than $ 1.4 million in savings through a defined - benefit plan (wherein the pensioner is
paid a set income based on past earnings and years
of service, mostly confined to the public sector these days) compared to $ 674,711 for someone with no pension but a maxed -
out Registered Retirement Savings Plan.
It's kind
of mind - boggling that they would undertake such huge investments and not
pay attention to what we know about how to pick
out the
people who are going to be best.»
I know
people who are
paying as much $ 10,000 a month to a PR firm and getting very little
out of it.
It
pays out up to $ 6,480 per
person a year, which, for a typical Canadian couple can account for up to a quarter
of total retirement income.
«Many
people's perspective is that they've
paid in to the program, so they want to get as much as possible
out of it ASAP,» he said.
Startups like Instacart and TaskRabbit have recently cut large numbers
of employees and undergone strategic realignments, as they try to figure
out crucial details such as how much to
pay people and what profit margins to expect.
Instead
of simply trying to outlaw an obviously productive practice, why not simply figure
out a way to make sure that
people who rent rooms are
paying their taxes?
People would generally only have to pay that much if they either didn't have health insurance (making them out of compliance with the Affordable Care Act, which requires Americans to have coverage) or if they had not yet reached their health plan's deductible (more common for people with high - deductible, so - called catastrophic health p
People would generally only have to
pay that much if they either didn't have health insurance (making them
out of compliance with the Affordable Care Act, which requires Americans to have coverage) or if they had not yet reached their health plan's deductible (more common for
people with high - deductible, so - called catastrophic health p
people with high - deductible, so - called catastrophic health plans).
«A lot
of people will assume the value is a capital gain and can
pay when trade it
out,» says Perry Wodin.
The bill would also permit states to opt
out of providing benefits such as prescription drugs, which could result in more
people paying out of pocket.
«It's a six - second video,» I point
out, «do you think
people are
paying attention to the lines
of the tape?»
If you are
paying people out of an account that contains all your funds, if someone were to get their hands on that account number, you could very quickly be cleaned
out.
People are so busy, they say, «Let me just get my taxes
out of the way and
pay those,» instead
of trying to retain the most, legally, that you can.
«You give away enough
of the product for free to drive
out innovation and value to the marketplace, then
people don't mind
paying for some really great advanced features.»
People do not have empathy toward big companies, and they certainly don't think about the trials and tribulations
of paying out actual health care costs.
People pay into this while working and, in the event that they find themselves unemployed, get a good chunk
of their former salary — up to a whopping 90 % for the lowest - end jobs —
paid out to them for a period
of up to two years.
A recent Commonwealth Fund study co-authored by Collins looked at how much low - income
people, who would otherwise be eligible for Medicaid if their state had expanded the program, would
pay in premiums and
out -
of - pocket health costs if they enrolled in «silver» Obamacare plans and if they were «medium» users
of health care.
About half
of people who do not
pay for a news - specific source still say they actively seek
out news (51 percent) while the other half say they mostly bump into news (48 percent).
And far from suggesting
people should try to rid themselves
of all emotional influence in their decision - making, the paper points
out that learning to
pay attention only to those feelings that are relevant to the decisions being made is what counts.
Trump also maintained that Daniels's claims
of an affair are false, and as Vox's Matt Yglesias points
out, Trump is basically saying he's pretty easy to blackmail since he's apparently willing to
pay large sums
of money to keep
people from saying things that aren't even true.
People can
pay of the loans they knowing took
out.
Also, if a majority
of the Board is comprised
of persons other than (i)
persons for whose election proxies were solicited by the Board; or (ii)
persons who were appointed by the Board to fill vacancies caused by death or resignation or to fill newly - created directorships («Board Change»), unless the Committee or Board determines otherwise prior to such Board Change, then participants immediately prior to the Board Change who cease to be employees or non-employee directors within six months after such Board Change for any reason other than death or permanent disability generally have their (i) options and stock appreciation rights become immediately exercisable and to the extent not canceled or cashed
out, generally have at least six months to exercise such awards; (ii) restrictions with respect to restricted stock and RSRs lapse and generally shares are delivered; and (iii) performance shares and performance units
pay out pro rata based on performance through the end
of the last calendar quarter before the time the participant ceased to be an employee.
The hedge fund would break even on its debt investment if the Berkshire bid prevails because gains in some parts
of its debt holdings, which would be
paid out in full, would offset losses in the unsecured bonds it holds, where it would take a deep haircut, the
people said.
They make their money by getting
people to
pay all
of the rent or all
of the corporate profits hoping to come
out with a capital gain.
People get
paid huge amounts
of money to figure it
out, and they still get it wrong more often than not.
While other get -
out -
of - debt strategies can be cheaper — you'd likely
pay less in interest charges, for instance, by using the debt avalanche method — the debt snowball method feels better to some
people.
The problem here is the math — the number
of people in the middle is too large to be
paid out of revenues from higher taxes at the top.
In other words,
people have to
pay either so much debt or they have to have forced saving, like pension fund saving, that the economy is shrunk for financial reasons, for putting more and more
of its money
out of the real economy
of goods and services into the financial sector.
Most
people would
pay the tax penalty for being uninsured instead
of purchasing insurance on the exchanges, because
paying full cost for insurance remains unaffordable for practically everybody — it's a fact that medical costs in the United States are
out of control.
It depends on how many
of the
people have jobs, whether those jobs
pay decent wages, and what happens to those who don't have jobs or whose wages don't lift them
out of poverty.
The first
person or business to solve a group
of transactions, known as a «block,» is given a «block reward,» which is
paid out in the tokens
of the virtual currency being validated.
People who rent
out rooms should
pay tax,
of course, but they should not be regulated like a Ritz - Carlton hotel.
People are
paying first dollar care
out of their forced savings account, then they've got catastrophic care over that.