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They will pay for news if they think it has value.
ECONOMIST: American newspapers
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How can you be forced to pay tax on something that has absolutely no value at all for it is illegal for you to sell it?
FORBES: Links 23 July: Global Inequality Edition
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There is no such thing as a penalty for withdrawing from a taxable account, but you will have to pay capital gains if the investment has risen in value since you bought.
FORBES: The Ultimate Financial Bucket List
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While the value of many companies has contracted, bosses' pay packets have not.
ECONOMIST: Pay for chief executives: Is that enough? | The
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Crucially the value of this long-term pay is discounted, so it has a lower weight within the ratio.
CNN: EU secures deal to cap bankers' bonuses
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However, the number has soared as buyers in Asia now pay the U.S. street value of cocaine for rhino horn.
WSJ: 3 charged in smuggling horns of endangered rhinos
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That deal, set to expire early next year, has been derided in the pay-TV industry as one that dilutes the value of programming and risks cannibalizing the pay-TV subscription business.
WSJ: CBS to Remove Some Showtime Content From Netflix
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Based on the assumption that all future generations will have to pay the bills that today's generation has left behind, Mr Kotlikoff tries to measure the present value of net future taxes (that is, taxes to be paid minus benefits, such as pensions, to be received) for individuals of different ages over their remaining lifetimes and, collectively, for future generations.
ECONOMIST: The perils of privatisation | The
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Accounting measures should follow the movement of economic value, not cash, so that delaying pay packets until next year (or retirement) has no effect.
ECONOMIST: Government accounting
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The argument over why value stocks have higher returns than growth has raged for years is it because investors pay too much for glamor, or is it because there is some unknown risk factor hiding under the bed, such as technological obsolescence or insolvency?
FORBES: Roger Ibbotson's New Theory Of Everything
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While millions of American homes are under water because their value has fallen below the amount owed on them, most commercial buildings are generating enough cash to pay off their loans.
WSJ: Malls, Offices May Slump Less Steeply Than Homes