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单词 post-tax
释义

Definition of post-tax in English:

post-tax

adjectivepəʊs(t)ˈtaksˌpoʊstˈtæks
  • (of income or profits) remaining after the deduction of taxes.

    60 per cent of post-tax earnings
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If it is able to generate operating margins of just 3%, a figure below that of its competitors, the group would generate £100m in post-tax profits.
    • He said the profit per customer ratio was based on post-tax profits.
    • What makes it worse is that it is a tax on an asset which has already been bought with post-tax income.
    • In the last financial year it made a few hundred crores in post-tax profit which it has the freedom to invest.
    • If the £48,000 from his redundancy reduces that sum, it still means that over a three-year period he was able to accumulate from post-tax income somewhere in the region of £90,000 odd.
    • This comes to over 8 ½% of our post-tax income, which is some spending spree!
    • Nevertheless, as a nation, we now owe 150% of our annual post-tax income, compared to about 140% for US consumers.
    • He helps you decide what sorts of investments, in what kinds of accounts, will maximize your post-tax income.
    • President Reagan's Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 had the intention and the effect of increasing post-tax income inequality.
    • Strip this out from its current market value of £185m, and investors are being asked to pay about 12-13 times expected post-tax profits.
    • In other words, one can really add 47 per cent in a sense, from post-tax income.
    • The target return-on-equity figure will be calculated by dividing post-tax profit in a given year by average shareholders' funds in the year.
    • The post-tax profit for the period has surged by more than 160 per cent to 120 million leva.
    • He said the report found that Irish motor insurers made 11 times more post-tax profit than their British equivalents in the past 16 years.
    • However, if the corporation pays taxes on its income and then distributes the post-tax profits to its shareholders in the form of dividends, then the shareholders pay taxes as well.
    • They show the average post-tax income is £12,700 a year.
    • Free income is defined as post-tax income less committed household expenditure on things like food and utilities - i.e., essential spending.
    • More than £7bn was released in the fourth quarter of last year, equivalent to a massive 4% of post-tax income.
    • Some analysts seem to think an operating margin of 30% is achievable, implying a business generating some £800m in post-tax profits.
    • According to the Bank of England, borrowed money secured on housing - but not spent on housing - ran at 7.7% of national post-tax income during the late Eighties boom.
 
 

Definition of post-tax in US English:

post-tax

adjectiveˌpoʊstˈtæksˌpōstˈtaks
  • (of income or profits) remaining after the deduction of taxes.

    60 percent of post-tax earnings
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some analysts seem to think an operating margin of 30% is achievable, implying a business generating some £800m in post-tax profits.
    • What makes it worse is that it is a tax on an asset which has already been bought with post-tax income.
    • He said the profit per customer ratio was based on post-tax profits.
    • He helps you decide what sorts of investments, in what kinds of accounts, will maximize your post-tax income.
    • This comes to over 8 ½% of our post-tax income, which is some spending spree!
    • Strip this out from its current market value of £185m, and investors are being asked to pay about 12-13 times expected post-tax profits.
    • Free income is defined as post-tax income less committed household expenditure on things like food and utilities - i.e., essential spending.
    • They show the average post-tax income is £12,700 a year.
    • The target return-on-equity figure will be calculated by dividing post-tax profit in a given year by average shareholders' funds in the year.
    • The post-tax profit for the period has surged by more than 160 per cent to 120 million leva.
    • If the £48,000 from his redundancy reduces that sum, it still means that over a three-year period he was able to accumulate from post-tax income somewhere in the region of £90,000 odd.
    • He said the report found that Irish motor insurers made 11 times more post-tax profit than their British equivalents in the past 16 years.
    • More than £7bn was released in the fourth quarter of last year, equivalent to a massive 4% of post-tax income.
    • According to the Bank of England, borrowed money secured on housing - but not spent on housing - ran at 7.7% of national post-tax income during the late Eighties boom.
    • If it is able to generate operating margins of just 3%, a figure below that of its competitors, the group would generate £100m in post-tax profits.
    • However, if the corporation pays taxes on its income and then distributes the post-tax profits to its shareholders in the form of dividends, then the shareholders pay taxes as well.
    • In the last financial year it made a few hundred crores in post-tax profit which it has the freedom to invest.
    • President Reagan's Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 had the intention and the effect of increasing post-tax income inequality.
    • Nevertheless, as a nation, we now owe 150% of our annual post-tax income, compared to about 140% for US consumers.
    • In other words, one can really add 47 per cent in a sense, from post-tax income.
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 23:53:27