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The Automobile Tax

... would have to extend the tax to vehicles that are older than eight years. This would make the tax even more difficult to collect. The members feel that getting rid of the tax and slightly raising property taxes could greatly reduce this collection problem. Not only would this idea reduce collection problems, but it would also save Dallas residents money on their taxes. Saving money isn’t the key issue that members are focusing on though. The issue at hand that the city council members are focusing on is one of equity. This new raise in p ...

Number of words: 511 | Number of pages: 2

The Economic Impact Of The New Telecommunications Legislation

... only sure way to ensure that prosperity. Telecommunications in Canada, which include services and manufacturing, employ more than 125,000 people and generate over $21 billion in revenues (Dept. of Communications, 1992, p7). Telecommunications helps to overcome the obstacles of distance in a vast country such as Canada, permitting remote communities to benefit from services taken for granted in large urban centres. More than 98 percent of Canadian households have a telephone, and there are more than 15 million telephone lines for a population ...

Number of words: 1355 | Number of pages: 5

The Australian Dollar

... there have been broad-scale A$ purchases on the back of (1) Australia's economic growth outperformance combined with (2) the absence of an RBA interest rate cut (despite easings from the US Fed, Bank of Canada and the New Zealand). Outlook: another look at the fundamentals: The A$ may have gained recently against the USD but the move has been modest, retrieving less than half of the decline from $US0.82 in December 1996. A number of forecasts have been published suggesting that further A$ appreciation is in prospect for the year ahead ...

Number of words: 615 | Number of pages: 3

Describe The Challenges That Human Resource Managers Will Face In The Next Five Years

... managers and what I feel are the challenges and why. During this symposium, the major challenges addressed were pay equity, the value of human resources, unity versus diversity, fostering innovation, and Global sensitivity. Now, I don't dispute that these are challenges that we as human resource managers are going to face in the upcoming years but I think that the technology revolution, AIDS, downsizing or outsourcing, and sexual harassment are going to be bigger challenges. The first item that senior human resource managers fel ...

Number of words: 3202 | Number of pages: 12

Economic Development In Zimbabwe

... The purpose of this essay is to make a cursory but adequate examination of Zimbabwean socio-economic and political system, as means to analyzing the countries economic development. The ultimate purpose of this study is to provide a model of the structure necessary to achieve economic development where none previously existed. Zimbabwe is an appropriate model because the dynamics of underdevelopment to development in this country are readily apparent. This model can be useful in understanding underdevelopment in oth ...

Number of words: 1511 | Number of pages: 6

Gant, The Fashionable Alternative!

... in the upcoming year is the overall budget allocation for the National Print Campaign and the Co-operative Advertising Program. Because the company has limited financial resources, management must maximize its existing strengths while trying to pursue untapped opportunities. Additional goals include new product launches and brand equity development. III. Postitioning With increased competition and fragmentation in the shirt business, Gant’s image is being exposed to “underpositioning.” Currently, the brand lacks differentiation. Yet ...

Number of words: 1242 | Number of pages: 5

Situation Analysis: Ford Mustang

... every car was built entirely by hand. This process was not only very slow, but it was very expensive. This is the primary reason so many early innovators went out of business and the other ones were not profitable enough to expand their business. Henry Ford changed that when he introduced the assembly line. This both increased production speed and decreased cost. This idea of mass production revolutionized the automobile industry. Soon all of the top auto producers would have a assembly line of their own. The lower costs and faster deli ...

Number of words: 4737 | Number of pages: 18

The Currency Crisis In Thailand And Its Effects

... Against the US dollar, Thailand was forced to abandon fixed exchange rates for the baht. This caused the baht to plummet more than 20%. In August of 1997 IMF responded by approving a $17.2 billion bailout package. After investigation by the IMF they concluded that hedge funds also played a role in Thailand's financial crisis. As a result of multibillion-dollar overhang, Thai business remains paralyzed with frozen cash flow. Also affected are the private sectors and the countries banking system. The private sector carries huge debt b ...

Number of words: 991 | Number of pages: 4

Eliminating The Capital Gains Tax

... the opportunity for good returns on a person's money must be in abundance to allure investments in such ventures. Capital gains taxes significantly diminish these returns, therefore reducing the incentives to invest. Eliminating the capital gains tax will spark entrepreneurship and new investments in the economy, which in turn will elevate economic growth and increase the number of jobs. In order to stimulate economic growth in the United States, taxes on capital gains should be eliminated. Members of Congress once considered a reducti ...

Number of words: 772 | Number of pages: 3

The Great Depression And The "New Deal"

... states received federal grants, which provided funding for such programs as public works projects, housing assistance, aid to families with dependent children, unemployment compensation and many other programs. These programs helped to eventually pull the economy and the nation out of the Great Depression. The main question is why the democratic administration and FDR felt these programs would work, and why they felt such a dramatic change in the role of the government was needed. For the answer we must turn to an economist by the name of ...

Number of words: 305 | Number of pages: 2

Monopolies - A Case Study

... and the subsequent degeneration of such states in Asia, cooperation has been deemed unnecessary and a general neo-imperialistic takeover, a rat race if the reader will bear with me, has been instigated. However, it must be understood before the reader continues, the process unravelling before our eyes today, this disaster, is not a recent occurrence. Some economists and political analysts have dated its"birth" to the start of the Russo-Japanese war and the industrialization of the African colonies (imperialism). This being the case, though im ...

Number of words: 2173 | Number of pages: 8

US And Russia Relations After The Defeat Of The USSR:

... States. Russians "needed and wanted effective advise and technical help from the United States" (Pickering 102). And the most amazing thing was that the United States didn't mind and, actually, wanted to help Russia. But why? Why the United States wanted to help Russians? And I think the answer to that is very simple: the United States realized that America and Russia must not think of each other as natural enemies, but must work together to make more peaceful world, even if they were ready to destroy each other not that long ago. United Stat ...

Number of words: 1437 | Number of pages: 6

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