Anonymous: Address to Greeks During February 12 Riots
people, and this is why we stand by the people of Greece. We have felt their pain and suffering. We cannot stand by and watch while the people are ...
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people, and this is why we stand by the people of Greece. We have felt their pain and suffering. We cannot stand by and watch while the people are ...
Taxpayers get a price for personal injury should seek professional advice on the tax consequences. A registered agent can explain not only when the price is not taxable, but can also defend this tax treatment with the Internal Revenue Service.
The rules studied for the examination of registered agent address the types of income that are excluded from the tax. One of the exclusions relates to payments of regulations for the trial of bodily harm. The general rule in such cases is only money paid as reimbursement of damage to property or medical expenses is not taxable income. This is because it is used to compensate for a loss.
...Wayne Swan’s 2012-13 Budget has achieved the biggest fiscal turnaround for over half a century—turning the $44.4 billion deficit upside-down into a slender surplus of $1.5 billion, seemingly all without the expected pain and suffering.
That is not to say the $45.9bn (3.1 per cent of GDP) materialised from thin air—cuts and sacrifices were made, albeit flying under the radar of most people. Savings totalling a whopping $33.6bn were made.
The defence budget bore the largest weight, copping a $5.5bn budget cut over the next four years. Other savings included scrapping plans to cut company tax by 1 per cent and deferring the scheduled increase in foreign aid. These 3 measures alone produced $13.2bn in savings—all of which probably are unlikely to create a lot of fuss.
High-income earners are likely to create most of the commotion. The super of those earning more than $300,000 a year will now be taxed at double the rate at 30 per cent. Foreign executives will
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