Mr. MOHAMMED: (Through translator) The land is now rented by large landowners who rent out this land that we used to rent out at a much lower price before that we could afford and where we could grow wheat and fodder for our cows and sheep.
It is no surprise of a man whose precocious appetite for business and numbers was apparent in his teens, when he used money he had saved from his paper round to buy land and rent it to farmers.
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Ground-rents and the ordinary rent of land are, therefore, perhaps, the species of revenue which can best bear to have a peculiar tax imposed upon them.
The National Forest Service, from which many ranchers rent grazing land, may require them to graze fewer cattle, in order to encourage native grasses and wildlife.
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When you land in Beirut, rent a car - however you will need to be a competent, confident driver to handle the Lebanese penchant for white-knuckle driving without breaking a sweat.
Ben Collard, director of renewables at George F White, said he was advising his clients to set rent on land used for a wind turbine at ten per cent of the estimated income.
The co-operative is part of a growing urban agricultural movement in London, where demand for allotments -- plots of land that individuals can rent to grow fruit and vegetables -- far outstrips supply.
They may seem less brutal than the events in the Highlands but the Lowland clearances were just as effective at displacing country dwellers: by 1820 an entire social class of cottars - peasant farmers who had a traditional claim on land in return for rent or service to a landlord and who made up a third of the population - simply disappeared.
This is because, in a normal lease agreement, the lessee is expected to use the land more or less as it is with minimal investment in the land itself, while paying rent to the lessor.
Non-royals are often dependent on their local council to rent them a strip of land.
It also owns 1.4 million square meters of industrial buildings that generate rent, and enough developable land for 21, 000 homes.
It also owns 15 million square feet of industrial buildings that generate rent, and enough developable land for 21, 000 homes.
When the junkyard's lease is up next year he can decide whether to renew it at a higher rent or to sell the land to a developer.
Their problem is common in Russia: They built on land leased from the city, paying rent and property taxes for 16 years, but never managed to obtain registration for the house.
Two of the provisions that I found rather intriguing were a wealth tax and land value taxation (also known as community ground rent).
The other consists of distortions of the land market, such as badly defined titles and rent controls, which McKinsey reckons reduce growth by 1.3 percentage points a year.
Kyrgyz officials calculated the rent based on the amount of wheat the land could produce.
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In the late 1590s the owner of the land used by Shakespeare's company unexpectedly hiked the rent.
Lawyers say the signs in the lobby listing the price of admission with the word "recommended" below in smaller type violate a 1893 law mandating the public be admitted free of charge at least five days and two evenings per week in exchange for monetary grants and rent-free use of city-owned land.
Miss Waterhouse donated the land and created a charitable trust to build six houses for rent for local people.
Participants in the system generally rent out spare rooms - or, in some cases, land for camping - and, in addition to breakfast, might also offer a family dinner.
They moved into three caravans on the land in 2011 after their businesses collapsed and they could no longer afford to rent their property.
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