de fiscal
31Fiscal Neutrality — occurs when taxes and government spending are neutral, with neither having an effect on demand. Fiscal neutrality creates a condition where demand is neither stimulated nor diminished by taxation and government spending. A balanced budget is an… …
32fiscal drag — ˌfiscal ˈdrag noun [uncountable] ECONOMICS when rising incomes mean that the government receives increasing amounts of tax, as people move up into higher tax bracket S (= levels of income with a particular tax rate). Taxes have to be adjusted to… …
33fiscal stimulus — ➔ stimulus * * * fiscal stimulus UK US noun [C or U] (plural fiscal stimuli) ► ECONOMICS, GOVERNMENT an attempt by a government to increase economic activity by reducing taxes, increasing government spending, or both: »If Congress doesn t come… …
34fiscal — Como adjetivo (‘del fisco o del fiscal’), tiene una sola terminación, válida para ambos géneros: ministerio/reforma fiscal. Consecuentemente, como sustantivo, con el sentido de ‘persona que, en un juicio, ejerce la acusación pública’, es común en …
35fiscal periods — (1) Postal quarters consist of three designated accounting periods, except the fourth quarter of the postal fiscal year, which consists of four designated accounting periods. (2) Postal fiscal year consists of 13 designated accounting periods… …
36Fiscal — bezieht sich auf: Fiscal (Spanien), eine Gemeinde in der Provinz Huesca in Spanien Fiscal (Amares), eine Gemeinde im Kreis Amares in Portugal Fiscal (Insel), eine Insel vor Rio de Janeiro, Brasilien Diese Seite ist eine Begriffsklärung …
37fiscal — is derived from a Latin term meaning treasury or basket and is employed to refer to the monetary practices and policies of a government, company, or institution: The fiscal arrangements of this store are in hopeless shape. The term fiscal year… …
38fiscal crisis — (of the state) A term coined by James O Connor (The Fiscal Crisis of the State, 1973), to denote the ‘structural gap’ in advanced capitalist societies between state revenues and expenses, which leads to economic, social, and political crises; now …
39fiscal crisis of the state — fiscal crisis (of the state) A term coined by James O Connor (The Fiscal Crisis of the State, 1973), to denote the ‘structural gap’ in advanced capitalist societies between state revenues and expenses, which leads to economic, social, and… …
40fiscal — 1560s, pertaining to public revenue, from M.Fr. fiscal, from L.L. fiscalis of or belonging to the state treasury, from L. fiscus treasury, originally purse, basket made of twigs (in which money was kept), of unknown origin. The general sense of… …