Taxes
in sentence
2462 examples of Taxes in a sentence
Where do the issues about poverty, the economy, deficit, high taxes, inflation, and racial injustice come in?
Apparently the tax system and the art of cheating on your
taxes
in Japan is something most Westerners might be surprised to see.
If it wasn't for the cheap production and obvious low budget I would say that this movie reeks of global elitist scare mongering for their global warming campaign to have even more
taxes
implemented on an already overtaxed population.
In other words US society in these early mid 70s, at the end of the Vietnam war, moved from the cult of sheer force to solve any problem to the understanding that a solution can only come if it is founded on some kind of peaceful consensus, even if that means accepting some kind of traffic provided it becomes non-violent, peaceful, and it respects some basic rules like paying
taxes.
They hate having to pay
taxes
when the country's going down the pan."
When she gets promoted to Tax Inspector her job with her new colleagues is to investigate developer Hideko Gondo, played extremely well by Tsutomu Yamazaki, to find out how he is cheating on his
taxes.
Everything is done outside any official declaration, evading
taxes
and all controls.
Scott owed $25,00 in back
taxes
after publishing his (most successful) book in the Summer of 1943 - during the height of WW II.
I went to work, paid my taxes, and came home to my wife and three children.
In regards to the latter point, I didn't feel that Robin came across as particularly noble in this movie (although he does decide to return the
taxes
to the common folk) but rather he seemed interested primarily in Marian (Uma Thurman).
The only truly noble scene in the movie (aside perhaps from the decision to return the taxes) was the exchange near the end of the film between Will Scarlett (Owen Teale) and Daguerre (Jeroen Krabbe) about the future of England.
In particular, while Robin's victory over Daguerre and Folcanet was accomplished, I was left wondering what was going to happen when King John (OK - Prince John) returned with his troops to collect the
taxes.
Nancy plays Susan Jacks, an IRS agent who's assigned to collect the astronomical
taxes
that have accrued.
Albert states the antique store is a business but the IRS states that it's a hobby so now unless Albert can prove it's a business he will owe the IRS
taxes
on the $36,000 plus penalties.
She, however, hasn't paid her
taxes
in years, and gets her house repossessed by the bank.
The alternative is to rely on fiscal stimulus, achieved by cutting
taxes
or increasing spending.
More than 300
taxes
and fees have been imposed on peasants by all levels of government.
Today, a farmer's annual income is only one-sixth that of an urban dweller's, but he has to pay three times more in
taxes.
In response, Premier Wen Jiabao announced a series of measures during the NPC, ranging from phasing out agricultural
taxes
over the next five years to measures aimed at increasing farmers' income.
That is why the new deal requires that the government immediately cut pensions, hike
taxes
(beginning with the value-added tax), liberalize the labor market, and adhere to severe spending constraints.
What happened instead is that
taxes
on capital came down perceptibly while
taxes
on labor have kept increasing.
Higher
taxes
at the top could generate revenues to finance needed public investment, and to provide some social protection for those at the bottom, including the unemployed.
Even without widening the fiscal deficit, such “balanced budget” increases in
taxes
and spending would lower unemployment and increase output.
Likewise, the enduring attraction of supply-side economics, despite all of the evidence against it (especially in a period in which there is high unemployment), will prevent raising
taxes
at the top.
To appease the mood of dissatisfaction, Prime Minister Alain Juppé recently announced a reduction of income
taxes
scheduled for 1997.
Making tax systems simpler and fairer is not the same as raising all
taxes.
This means that nominal demand will rise only if governments deploy fiscal policy to reduce
taxes
or increase public expenditure – thereby, in Milton Friedman’s phrase, putting new demand directly “into the income stream.”
Policymakers are equally reluctant to champion meaningful changes – like carbon
taxes
or the elimination of fossil-fuel subsidies.
Taxes
were evaded on a massive scale, and the welfare state was characterized by endemic waste.
There is a way out of this trap, but only if we tilt the discussion about how to lower the debt/GDP ratio away from austerity – higher
taxes
and lower spending – toward debt-friendly stimulus: increasing
taxes
even more and raising government expenditure in the same proportion.
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