759 resultados para VAT revenues


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Mode of access: Internet.

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Pub. in advance of the complete report pertaining to Wealth, debt, and taxation, cf. "Letter of transmittal," p. 5.

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Prepared in connection with the decennial investigation authorized by the permanent census act pertaining to public indebtedness, valuations, taxation, revenues and expenditures, under the supervision of Starke M. Grogan, chief statistician in charge of Wealth, debt and taxation; John Lee Coulter, expert special agent in an advisory capacity; and Arthur J. Hirsch, chief of division, and pub. in advance of the complete report. cf. "Letter of transmittal," p. 5.

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After 1943, detailed data for individual cities and villages released in a separate report; only in summary form in this report.

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Developing a strategy for online channels requires knowledge of the effects of customers' online use on their revenue and cost to serve, which ultimately influence customer profitability. The authors theoretically discuss and empirically examine these effects. An empirical study of retail banking customers reveals that online use improves customer profitability by increasing customer revenue and decreasing cost to serve. Moreover, the revenue effects of online use are substantially larger than the cost-to-serve effects, although the effects of online use on customer revenue and cost to serve vary by product portfolio. Self-selection effects also emerge and can be even greater than online use effects. Ignoring self-selection effects thus can lead to poor managerial decision-making.

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While many offline retailers have developed informational websites that offer information on products and prices, the key question for such informational websites is whether they can increase revenues via web-to-store shopping. The current paper draws on the information search literature to specify and test hypotheses regarding the offline revenue impact of adding an informational website. Explicitly considering marketing efforts, a latent class model distinguishes consumer segments with different short-term revenue effects, while a Vector Autoregressive model on these segments reveals different long-term marketing response. We find that the offline revenue impact of the informational website critically depends on the product category and customer segment. The lower online search costs are especially beneficial for sensory products and for customers distant from the store. Moreover, offline revenues increase most for customers with high web visit frequency. We find that customers in some segments buy more and more expensive products, suggesting that online search and offline purchases are complements. In contrast, customers in a particular segment reduce their shopping trips, suggesting their online activities partially substitute for experiential shopping in the physical store. Hence, offline retailers should use specific online activities to target specific product categories and customer segments.

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This paper deals with the work performed at the Department of Zoology of the Faculty of Sciences in Saigon on planktonic material, collected in the Bay of Nhatrang, Central Vietnam. After preliminary considerations on the physical factors relating to plankton life in the Bay, the materials and methods are described. Follows a list of the planktonic organisms studied and identified, and the descriptions of 154 species of diatoms, containing mostly planktonic species mixed with a few benthic species. This is the first of a series of papers dealing with plankton organisms recorded in the Bay of Nhatrang. As it is intended to be a tool for Marine Biology students as well as interested, beginners, the systematic and descriptive characteristics have been reduced to a minimum. Stress was on making detailed and clear illustrations of the organisms described.

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Double Degree

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Mestrado em Marketing

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This graph shows the homestead exemption revenues and expenditures from FY 07-08 to FY 17-18.

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Wynne and Schaffer (2003) have highlighted both the strong growth of gambling activity in recent years, and the revenue streams this has generated for governments and communities. Gambling activities and the revenues derived from them have, unsurprisingly, therefore also been seen as a way in which to increase economic development in deprived areas (Jinkner-Lloyd, 1996). Consequently, according to Brown et al (2003), gambling is now a large taxation revenue earner for many western governments, at both federal and state levels, worldwide (for example UK, USA, Australia). In size and importance, the Australian gambling industry in particular has grown significantly over the last three decades, experiencing a fourfold increase in real gambling turnover. There are, however, also concerns expressed about gambling and Electronic Gaming in particular, as illustrated in economic, social and ethical terms in Oddo (1997). There are also spatial aspects to understanding these issues. Marshall’s (1998) study, for example, highlights that benefits from gambling are more likely to accrue at the macro as opposed to the local level, because of centralised tax gathering and spending of tax revenues, whilst localities may suffer from displacement of activities with higher multipliers than the institutions with EGMs that replace them. This also highlights a regional context of costs, where benefits accrue to the centre, but the costs accrue to the regions and localities, as simultaneously resources leave those communities through both the gambling activities themselves (in the form of revenue for the EGM owners), and the government (through taxes).