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Job Creation

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Understanding economic trends will help you change your business into a lean operation that triumphs in spite of adversity.
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By  | Filed In: Job Creation and Economic Indicators
The franchise industry can stimulate the economy creating jobs and adding millions of dollars to the economy.
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Rieva Lesonsky
The IFA is calling for Congress to loosen the purse strings and make it easier for potential franchisees to buy a franchise. And they want you to help spread the word.
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By Dina Dwyer-Owens |  Filed In: Franchises
International Franchise Association Chairwoman Dina Dwyer-Owens discusses how the current credit crunch is impacting franchise sales and what the IFA is doing to help.
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If your office is a train, then your office manager is its conductor, and for you to arrive at the station on time, they'll need to be a conductor extraordinaire.
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Ramon Ray
By  | Filed In: Operations
After email and browsing the web I would guess that printing is the task businesses do the most. We get an email, with the fine print that reads "please think before printing" and...
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"Rep. Frank Kratovil of Maryland, a Democrat, and Rep. Chris Lee of New York, a Republican, proposed amending IRS code to allow new businesses to write off more of their operating costs. The...
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A proposal to allow government intervention in labor disputes could prove costly.
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The Business Roundtable, an organization of some of the largest corporations, has issued a report saying that there is a serious gap in value for health care spending in the US and our...
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Tim Devaney - Tom Stein
Economic recovery starts with microenterprises. And microenterprises start with microlenders.
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Keith Girard
Administration officials have been making the rounds on Capitol Hill to explain a new relief initiative targeting small businesses. It couldn't come a moment too soon.
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TJ McCue lists a couple of useful resources for business owners and entrepreneurs to check out.
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Keith Girard
By  | Filed In: Tax Reform and Tax Law
President Obama's budget bill proposes freezing estate taxes at their 2009 level, ending the possibility of a complete phaseout. Will this end the death tax debate?
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By Julie Jargon |  Filed In: Entrepreneurship and Company Structures & Ownership
J.W. Hulme's co-owners borrowed heavily to fuel growth. Now the credit crunch has thrown the company -- and the lives of its owners -- into a spiral.
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Rieva Lesonsky
By  | Filed In: Franchises
I've just returned from the International Franchise Association's annual convention in San Diego, where the franchising world's best and brightest seemed to be feeling generally positive about the future and their ability to...
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Miranda Marquit
Talk of personal accountability for poor financial decisions is nice, but only us regular folks will really be held to it as the big guys are fully bailed out.
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Sam Thacker
Billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban writes in his blog on February 9,2009 and makes an offer to finance starts with his own money using a concept he designed called, "renewable capital."
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When the recession ends, will there be high paying jobs?
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Miranda Marquit
Integral to the future of better energy use -- and lower prices -- is what is known as a "smart grid."
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Tim Devaney - Tom Stein
One report finds a slight rise in small business hiring, but another report doesn’t.
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Business Glossary

Definitions for: job creation and worker assistance act of 2002
job creation and worker assistance act of 2002

legislation passed by Congress and signed into law on March 9, 2002 to stimulate the economy out of the recession and economic contraction caused by the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Here are some of the main provisions of the law:
Provisions Affecting Individuals

  1. Extended unemployment benefits for 13 weeks for workers who filed an initial claim for unemployment benefits on or after March 15, 2001.
  2. Extends the use of personal credits such as the child tax and adoption credits through December 31, 2003 for use in calculating the alternative minimum tax.
  3. Creates above-the-line deduction for classroom expenses for elementary and secondary school teachers up to $250 annually for supplies, books and computer equipment.
  4. Archer Medical Savings Accounts extends through December 31, 2003.
  5. Allows taxpayers to claim the education IRA exclusion and HOPE scholarship credit in the same year.

Provisions Affecting Business
  1. Business taxpayers become entitled to take an additional first-year depreciation deduction equal to 30% of the adjusted basis of qualified property. This 30% bonus depreciation is allowable for regular and AMT purposes for the tax year in which the property is placed into service after September 10, 2001. Property eligible for this treatment includes property with a recovery period of 20 years or less; water utility property; and certain kinds of computer software and qualified leasehold improvements.
  2. Net operating losses (NOLs) can now be carried forward for five years instead of two years if the losses arise in tax years 2001 or 2002.
  3. Taxpayers using the accrual method of accounting can now exclude from income money earned from the performance of qualified services that they think will not be collected. Qualified services include health, law and consulting services, and other services, provided to small businesses.
  4. Allows Subchapter S corporations to discharge certain indebtedness for tax purposes when they become insolvent.
  5. Extended many expiring business tax credits until December 31, 2003 including: Work Opportunity Tax Credit; Welfare-to-Work Credit; credit for producing electricity from wind, biomass, and poultry litter; clean-fuel vehicle deduction; qualified zone academy bonds; tax incentives for investment in Native American reservations; and other energy incentives.


Creation of New York City Liberty Zone

Created special tax breaks for taxpayers in the Liberty Zone of southern Manhattan to encourage them to rebuild after the events of September 11:

  1. The maximum deduction amount for qualifying property used in the Liberty Zone is increased to the cost of the property or $35,000, whichever is less.
  2. An additional first-year 30% depreciation deduction is created for qualifying property, on top of normal first-year depreciation deductions.
  3. The Work Opportunity Tax Credit is added for Liberty Zone taxpayers who work in a business in the Zone or for a business that relocated from the Zone to another location in New York City due to the terrorist attacks.
  4. A five-year replacement period (instead of the usual two-year period) is created for involuntarily converted property due to the terrorist attacks, if the property is replaced with other property used in New York City.
  5. Qualified leasehold improvement depreciation is allowed for fiveyear property put into service from September 10, 2001 through January 1, 2007.

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