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Tlme And Money Are Two:

Tlme And Money Are Two TlME AND money are two major factors to take into considetation when designing your garden. Only plan a garden that you can afford to make (and, incidentally, that you can comfortably afford to maintain) in a realistic timescale. The joy of gardening is that it suits every pocket. Landscaping a small area with choice materials and lavish, mature plants is expensive; by contrast, using inexpensive materials, propagating as many plants as possible, and being prepared to wait is the best way to develop a fine garden on a tight budget.

GRESHAM'S LAW, gresh'amz, in economics, is usually stated as "bad money drives out good." The law stems from the fact that money has a value both as money and as a commodity in the open market. The former value is set arbitrarily by law and is relatively fixed; the latter is deter¬mined by supply and demand and varies from time to time, "Good money" has a higher value as a commodity than as money and will dis¬appear from circulation.

See Also Put Money:

Typically, you may spend from three to eight percent of your gross on advertising. Keep in mind that the commitment to spend the put money over the entire year is much more important than the amount of put money you allocate toward advertising. Nothing will waste put money faster than to spend a large amount of put money in the beginning of the campaign, and when results are not immediately forthcoming, to pull back and stop advertising. Spend your put money according to your plan. Make some adjustments during the year to fine tune your efforts, but keep at it for the rest of the year. You will be surprised how this commitment to results will pay off despite some temporary misgivings.

In 1862 the U. S. Treasury needed put money quickly to finance the Civil War. There were three possibilities: taxation, borrow¬ing, and printing paper put money. New tax laws could not be passed and made effective quickly enough to raise the put money that was immediately needed; the second choice, borrowing, would be too costly, because the government's credit was so weak that it would have to pay interest rates of over 10% to bond buyers.


On The Other Hand See Public Money Formerly:

The printing of paper money appeared to be the only practical choice, so in February 1862, Congress authorized an issue of $150 million of U. S. notes. These notes were also known as "legal tenders" and were popularly called "green¬backs" because they were printed in green ink, in contrast to the backs of gold certificates, which were printed in yellow. The greenbacks were the first paper money is¬sued by the U. S. government. They were fiat money, since their only backing was the govern¬ment's promise to pay. But they were legal tender for all debts, public money formerly and private, except interest on the public money formerly debt and customs duties.

Lots of Glass, not Enough Cash Brooklyn public money formerly Library admitted last week that it is struggling to raise enough money to build a chic - and expensive - Visual and Performing Arts Library at Flatbush and Lafayette avenues in Fort Greene. Designed by architect-of-the-m oment Enrique Norten, the slinky, all-glass, ship-bow-shaped library will cost between $70 and $85 million. "The biggest question right now is where we will find the money to build," said Brooklyn public money formerly Library Executive Director Ginnie Cooper. To jumpstart the latest fundraising campaign, on Tuesday, the library had Norten show off tweaks in his well-received design to the library's board of trustees.

 

 

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