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- April 3, 2008: Katrina hero: Wal-Mart
- April 2, 2008: No Child Left Behind
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Archive for March 26, 2008
Tax freedom day
March 26, 2008 by Tom Armstrong.
From the Tax Foundation.
Tax Freedom Day, the day on which Americans have earned enough money to pay all their federal, state and local taxes for the year, will fall on April 23 this year, according to the Tax Foundation’s annual calculation using the latest government data on income and taxes.
Tax Freedom Day is calculated by dividing the official government tally of all taxes collected in each year by the official government tally of all income earned in each year. Governments—federal, state and local—took 29.6% of income in 1970, 30.4% of income in 1980, 33.6% in 2000, and so on. This percentage is the nation’s total tax burden. We then use the historical trend and the most recent economic data to make a projection of what the tax burden will be in the current year and we convert that burden into a date—a percentage of the year—on which Americans will have earned enough income to pay their total tax bill for the year.
This year’s Tax Freedom Day falls three days earlier than in 2007. Fiscal stimulus rebates and a projection of slow growth in 2008 are the principal reasons for the earlier celebration. However, if the large projected deficit for 2008 were counted as a tax in the current year, Tax Freedom Day would fall on May 3.
In 2008, Americans will work 74 days to afford their federal taxes and 39 more days to pay state and local taxes. Meanwhile, buying food requires 35 days of work, clothing 13 days, and housing 60 days. Other major categories are health and medical care (50 days), transportation (29 days), and recreation (21 days).
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Into Web page design?
March 26, 2008 by Tom Armstrong.
Love this site–it’s been a great time saver for me. They have Javascripts, FavIcon generator, htaccess password generator, htaccess banning generator, and more. No, I not being paid to advertise them (I do not earn money from this blog). The site has been a time saver for me, and students in my beginning Web page design class benefit from it.
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Poor Zimbabwe
March 26, 2008 by Tom Armstrong.
Zimbabwe’s new 10 million dollar bill is red. One side has the official stamps of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and some meaningless serial numbers. The other is a pastiche of a fish jumping out of a lake and a giant dam in the background. The bill, released for the first time last month, is actually not a proper currency note at all but rather a “bearer check.” Zimbabwe stopped printing real money long ago, when its inflation rate was still at a manageable level. Today these bearer checks are the only currency remaining. Last week in Zimbabwe 10 million dollars could buy exactly two rolls of toilet paper. By now it probably won’t get quite that much.
Read it all here.
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Reverse convertibles
March 26, 2008 by Tom Armstrong.
Click on image to augment.
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