
31 January 2012 | 112 replies
If we simply lowered our taxation on corporations and encouraged them to send capital back to shareholders to deploy it efficiently wouldn't it help the overall economy and thus the tax coffers?

7 February 2010 | 5 replies
Contact a CPA familiar with non-profit accounting and taxation.

6 January 2010 | 20 replies
Nowhere else are consumers more exposed to double-taxation, usurous fees and the like to access their own funds.As it applies to our society, and RE as well, shifting from debt to production as a greater share of GDP is going to be key.

20 January 2010 | 0 replies
For example, if you have $300k in leftover revenue, do you pre-emptively spend on the property to avoid the taxation, or take the profit AFTER taxes and put it towards an emergency fund for more difficult years?

15 February 2010 | 7 replies
For the seller, I doubt that there will be any consideration as to financial needs, estate planning, taxation, not to mention any portfolio distributions which would be beyond the capability of most originators.

31 August 2010 | 37 replies
That will be the primary form of taxation going forward and it is why being a net debtor is a good financial decision.

25 November 2010 | 90 replies
Get rid of the man-made global warming hysteria, and panic- and the progressives lose a major pretext for massive government control, taxation, and redistribution.

13 August 2009 | 76 replies
Ron Paul, who opposes Cap and Trade vehemently and who you keep say you're going to vote for, has already explained that Cap and Trade is about nothing more than taxation.

1 September 2009 | 14 replies
And it really depends on what kind of information you are dispensing.For example, the detailed content on taxation and apartment purchaisng is blog material without question.

4 June 2010 | 5 replies
Absolutely no difference in construction(better in some ways) financing, taxation, etc.