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Taxes are distributed to cities by just giviing them all the money and they decide what to do with it.
Money is just paper, it is printed off in factories or a bank machine, then distributed through the bank
Federal Debt is the money that a country has borrowed from others that can not be repaid immediately. Short term notes are not part of the debt.In the case of the United States, this is money owed to China, Japan, The European Union and other groups. This can not be bankrupted away and will eventually be paid by our children and grandchildren. Debt makes a country weaker.
Yes. All debts of the estate must be settled before any money can be distributed. If there are more debts than there are money, no one will inherit anything.
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menopause? children grandchildren money housing job? retirement?
'New money' is printed at the 12 Federal Reserve Branches and is distributed to banks to be distributed. When they do this, they take out old currency and replace it with newly printed stuff.
Taxes are distributed to cities by just giviing them all the money and they decide what to do with it.
The next of kin (less any taxes owed by the deceased), spouse if married at the time of their passing, otherwise all children in equal shares, then grandchildren if children are not alive. Then parents... etc...
It may depend on how the will was written. In most cases the intent is that the grandchildren get the money, though it is typically put in trust with the spouse for their benefit.
For example, one Reformation-era pope spent a good deal of money for the wedding of his children and his grandchildren, just as a king would
No. He did not because he was very selfish. He killed his children in world war 2 and ate his wife in a fantastic dinner of no food at all. Derek was stuck up with his secret girlfriend so he decided to keep his money to spend it on his beautiful grandchildren.
Depending on the process, most places require that to happen prior to appointing an executor. If the beneficiaries are not happy with the choice of executor, they can request the court appoint a neutral party. That can cost the estate a lot of money.
That would be the logical thing to do. However, if some heir was particularly interested in keeping the house, he or she could offer to buy out the interest that the other heirs have in that house.
It is distributed first to the banks by the Mint that makes the money and then the population does it.
It depends on the country where it was grown and where it is being distributed.