GNP = GDP + NFIA
If NFIA positive, then GNP greater than GDP.
+NFIA = GNP - GDP
If NFIA negative, then GDP greater than GNP.
-NFIA = GDP - GNP
net foreign factor is the income earned by citizens of a nation while they are working abroad
I don't think so. A marginal rate is the amount you pay on the next $ of income. As our tax brackets are progressive, and with the additional income you get no more exemptions/deductions than the previous, it would seem it would have to be positive...or at least as positive as you were before, (so if the marginal increase still means you get taxable income (from child care, or earned income credit, etc.) I guess your entire effective rate would be negative.
as national income is the sum of goods and services produced within a country and income from abroad. hence increase in foreign exchange will increase the national income.
In this method, national income is measured at the stage when factor incomes are paid out by the production units to the owners of the factors of production. The main steps involved in this method are as follows: (1) Classify the production units into distinct industrial sectors like agriculture, forestry, manufacturing, banking, trade etcetera. (2) Estimate the following factor incomes paid out by the production units in each industrial sector: (a)Compensation of employees (b)Rent (c)Interest (d)Profit The sum total of the above factor incomes paid out is the same as net value added at factor cost the industrial sector. (3) Take the sum of factor payments by all the industrial sectors to arrive at the net domestic product at factor cost. (4) Add net factor income from abroad to the net domestic product at factor cost to arrive at the net national product at factor cost.
GNP is higher when there is more income generated from Americans on our land and abroad then there is by the income generated domestically alone.
net foreign factor is the income earned by citizens of a nation while they are working abroad
Yes, cash flow can be positive while net income is negative.
It wouldn't be a negative.....if you're looking at an annual filing and it shows a positive interest expense line and a negative interest income line....it doesn't mean that the interest income is actually negative....it offsets the interest expense...since all positive amounts are actually being deducted from Net Sales
New farmland: positive - increases employment and income of taxes negative - encroaches on the habitat of wildlife and fauna
Whenever you keep a budget, comparing income to spending, you are adding positive and negative values.
They need to keep track of income and expenditure: that is, money coming in and money going out. Income is generally treated as a positive value and, since money going out is a flow in the opposite direction, it is given a negative sign so that income and expenditure can be combined.
Profit or loss = income - expenses. A positive number is profit, a negative number is loss.
i want to work abroad to earn a suitable income which i can render my services at my age
Levittown is a small town on Long Island, NY. It allowed lower income families a chance to own a home. I'll go with it being a positive.
I don't think so. A marginal rate is the amount you pay on the next $ of income. As our tax brackets are progressive, and with the additional income you get no more exemptions/deductions than the previous, it would seem it would have to be positive...or at least as positive as you were before, (so if the marginal increase still means you get taxable income (from child care, or earned income credit, etc.) I guess your entire effective rate would be negative.
write down all your expenses and income. include a portion of your income for miscellaneous expenses. subtract your expenses from your income; if the answer is a positive number, then you have a budget surplus; if the number is 0, then your budget is in balance; if the number is negative, then you have a budget shortfall
The payroll function and the payroll processing are performed by the payroll department in a company. They must ensure that people get paid accurately and in time, which would be the positive aspect. The negative aspect concerns the effect payroll has on the income of the company.