Speaking very generally, I'd say that this has to do at least in part with California's far higher cost of living, increased travel time, and famous lack of public transportation.
Nurses can specialise in more than one area.
There are nurses that are more knowledgeable than doctors and there are doctors who are more knowledgeable than nurses. That being said, doctors generally go through longer and more intensive training and are in a position to gain more experience than nurses.
If you are asking about a Federal Income Tax return---Yes, you can receive a larger refund than what you paid in. If your income is low and you have children, you may be eligible for Earned Income Credit and Child Tax Credit, along with several others. These will sometimes enlarge your refund to more than you paid.
it depends how good you are at football and what your club is. but generally, yes, footballers get paid more than nurses
Two types of income distribution are equal income distribution, where all individuals receive the same amount of income, and unequal income distribution, where income is not equally distributed among individuals resulting in some earning more than others.
No. It would be about the same if not higher. There is a big demand for male nurses in the U.S right now.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics the median annual wages of registered nurses were $62,450 in May 2008. The middle 50 percent earned between $51,640 and $76,570. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $43,410, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $92,240.
That's about the limit. They don't want you making more $$$ injured than working. Also, disability payments generally are not taxable.
Not if the settlement is medical expenses is more than the actual medical expense were. If the expense have already been deducted on your income tax return and you receive a settlement after that then you will have some recovery income that will have to be reported as income on your income tax return.
No. EE's make more.
No more and no less than any other individual.
There is not an English abbreviation of receive, other than in Accounting for receipts, which would be called Income, or Receivables, etc. etc.