Posts Tagged business

How I Got a First In My Business Studies Degree

If someone had said after my first year at university that I would graduate with a first class degree I would have laughed. I knew I could do the work, but with holding down a job to earn money and the vast number of assignments I had to do, I just didn’t have the time needed to work on each one to get a top class mark. Then a friend told me about the huge selection of pre-written essays, assignments and dissertations available at papers4you.com.

I had been struggling with my first assignment of my second year when I found out about papers4you.com. I needed to get an essay done in super fast time, as I knew I had three or four other assignments coming up in the next few weeks. I logged on and saw that the essay-bank was crammed with many papers on my subject, with a number that covered many of the topics I needed to look at for my essay.

I was still not convinced though. I thought there had to be a catch, and maybe that catch was the price. I saw that each pre-written paper came with a full reference list as well, so I was sure the cost would be way beyond my student budget. Not expecting much, I checked out one of the essays that I would have loved to get hold of and saw the price was really reasonable. I decided to buy two essays, as I thought this would give me more of chance of writing a better essay. Within minutes, the payment was complete and the pre-written, ready-made papers were sitting in my inbox.

I flew through that first essay. The papers gave me ideas on what to base my assignment on, and also led my own thoughts to other points I didn’t even realise I knew. Thanks to the detailed reference lists, I was able to track down the most suitable references quickly and easily. Armed with these two fantastic pre-written papers, I got that essay done in a couple of hours. It really was that simple.

As well as helping me stay on track with all my work, the papers added to my own knowledge. They helped me see things from other perspectives, and gave me more of an all-round view of the subject. It was just like having my tutor sitting in front of me and explaining things to me in detail.

Needless to say, I used papers4you.com throughout my second and third year for many assignments, essays and pieces of coursework. When it came to my dissertation, I was in no doubt about where I was going to go. I ended up buying two pre-written dissertations, and got my whole project finished within five days. While other course mates were spending hours holed up in the library searching through journals and books, I had all the information at my fingertips. It also left me free time that I could use to work and earn money.

I got a first class grade for my dissertation, and a first class degree overall. This is in no small part down to papers4you.com. The help and guidance they gave me was second to none, and worth every penny and more.

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Ohio unemployment rate drops to 9.6% – Bizjournals.com

Ohio’s unemployment rate finished the year with its ninth consecutive decline in December as a drop in payroll was outpaced by a larger fall in job-seekers.

The state Department of Job and Family Services said Friday that Ohio’s jobless rate hit a seasonally adjusted 9.6 percent in December. That’s down from 9.8 percent in November and more than a percentage point below the 10.8 percent jobless rate seen a year ago.

Over the month, nonfarm payroll dropped by more than 9,000 jobs to hit 5 million workers. That’s largely on a 7,300-job decline in Ohio’s goods-producing sector, which saw declines in construction and manufacturing. The much-larger service sector only lost 1,300 jobs over the month.

The ranks of those unemployed and actively seeking work, meanwhile, fell by 13,000 to hit 567,000, marking the lowest number of unemployed Ohioans in nearly two years.

County and city-level unemployment data are set to be released Tuesday. January statistics will be released March 4.

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Key Senator Urges Obama To Push Foreclosure Relief In State Of The Union – Huffington Post

WASHINGTON — Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) is urging President Barack Obama to pledge a new round of foreclosure relief during his State of the Union address next week. In a letter to the president obtained by The Huffington Post, Merkley said the administration’s current anti-foreclosure programs have proven woefully inadequate, and pushed for a more thorough program to keep families in their homes.

“A record one million families lost their home to foreclosure last year,” Merkley wrote. “Next week, Mr. President, you will have the attention of the nation. I urge you to use this opportunity to renew efforts to tackle the national foreclosure crisis.”

Merkley’s call for presidential leadership on foreclosures comes as infighting among federal regulators appears to have stalled out key reforms to the bank divisions that work with troubled borrowers and process foreclosures.

The FDIC has been pushing to impose new requirements on the operations of those divisions, which are known as mortgage servicers. The agency has been engaged in heated negotiations with other regulators at the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). According to a source familiar with the negotiations, the Fed had initially opposed the plan, but agreed to support the rules after a few weeks of negotiations. The OCC, however, which is currently responsible for regulating the largest mortgage servicers — Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup — has resisted those rules. The OCC has never publicly sanctioned a mortgage servicer, despite widespread court findings of servicer fraud in the foreclosure process.

The Treasury Department, which had supported the new rules, had expected an agreement between agencies by Friday, Jan. 14, according to a spokesman. That anticipated agreement has not yet come to fruition.

But Treasury itself is engaged in a delicate dance on foreclosure policy — defending the foreclosure prevention program criticized by Merkley, even as it urges sweeping reform of the bank divisions that participate in that program.

“The goal of the [Home Affordable Modification Program] was to prevent three to four million foreclosures,” Merkley wrote, “but to date, fewer than 600,000 homowners have been approved.”

Merkley is a persistent advocate for financial reform, and co-authored a key provision of last year’s Wall Street overhaul legislation known as the Volcker Rule, which bars banks from speculating with taxpayer money.

At a Wednesday meeting of the Mortgage Bankers Association, Cindy Gertz, Treasury’s Director of Operations for HAMP, praised the servicers involved in the Treasury plan, noting that they had ramped up staffing in order to deal with the foreclosure flood. Treasury spokeswoman Andrea Risotto told HuffPost that Gertz’s praise for servicers was restricted to HAMP, and not to any other servicer activities. But servicer abuses within HAMP have been widely documented, with borrowers frequently making good on loan modification arrangements only to be foreclosed on.

Risotto noted that Treasury has a “compliance agent” that inspects servicers once a month to make sure banks are implementing the program correctly. Nevertheless, servicer employees have admitted to fraudulently robo-signing hundreds of foreclosure documents a day as a matter of ordinary procedure. Treasury has never sanctioned a servicer for violating HAMP rules, and maintains that it has no authority to do so, because the program is voluntary for banks.

But as Treasury defends servicers with one hand, it is also demanding fundamental reform of the servicer industry with the other. On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner called for an overhaul of the way servicers are paid, arguing that the status quo is a “broken” system.

Regulatory agencies are debating whether to include standards for servicer conduct in new “skin-in-the-game” regulations for the mortgage bond market. The Wall Street overhaul legislation contains a provision requiring banks to retain at least five percent of the default risk whenever they sell mortgages off to investors. But there’s a key exception to the rule: for standardized, top-quality loans, banks will not have to retain any of the risk. The FDIC hopes that by including mortgage servicing rules in the definition of a standardized, top-quality mortgage, they can create a new gold standard for mortgage lending that is immune from current abuses.

But these new regulations would only reform the way that servicers operate with regard to new mortgages. They will not help the millions of borrowers already trapped in unaffordable loans, nor will they provide a way to manage the widening gyre of fraud allegations and other improprieties that pose massive potential losses at the nation’s too-big-to-fail banks.

In a speech Wednesday, FDIC Chair Sheila Bair warned, “Chaos in mortgage servicing and foreclosure is introducing a dangerous new uncertainty into this fragile market.” Bair suggested creating a foreclosure disaster fund akin to the BP oil spill fund that would compensate wronged homeowners and investors, while capping liabilities for big banks.

Merkley wants to find a solution that deals with homeowners already facing foreclosure (and bank fraud). He’s pushing for a six-point program to overhaul the current foreclosure system, including new standards for servicer conduct and new legal mechanisms to provide debt relief to deserving families.

Central to the program is a reform of the bankruptcy code, dubbed by Merkley as “lifeline bankruptcy reform.” Mortgages are currently excluded from the bankruptcy process, so even if borrowers declare bankruptcy — a process that is difficult to qualify for and comes with serious financial penalties — they cannot get debt relief on their mortgage. By making mortgages subject to renegotiation in bankruptcy under the supervision of a judge, Merkley hopes to establish a process that would allow borrowers to remain in their homes without simply granting a get-out-of-debt free card to everyone whose home value has declined since the collapse of the housing bubble.

“This makes much more sense than paying for modifications,” economist Dean Baker, co-Director of the Center for Economic Policy and Research, told HuffPost. Under HAMP, the Treasury pays servicers $1,000 to implement each loan modification, plus an additional $1,000 for every year that borrowers keep paying on the modified loan.

A similar program for farm loans was adopted during the mid-1980s and helped thousands of family farms avoid foreclosure, and a recent IMF report suggested bankruptcy reform as an effective solution to the U.S. mortgage mess. The same report found that the high rate of foreclosure may be responsible for between 1 percent and 1.25 percent of the U.S. unemployment rate, currently at 9.4 percent.

Mortgage bankruptcy reform was endorsed by then-Sen. Barack Obama during his presidential campaign, but died in the Senate in Spring 2009 amid weak backing from President Obama. Senate Republicans, who pushed for bankruptcy to be the appropriate way to deal with faltering megabanks, did not believe that consumers should receive the same treatment. Several bank-friendly Democrats also opposed the bankruptcy overhaul, prompting Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) to fume that banks “frankly own the place,” referring to Congress.

Merkley also calls for an end to the “dual-track” system, in which mortgage servicers begin the foreclosure process even as they negotiate loan modifications with troubled borrowers. The system allows banks to foreclose as quickly as possible if the modification falls through, but also leads to many unnecessary foreclosures as banks improperly continue with foreclosures on successful modifications. Merkley would also require servicers to establish a single individual to contact borrowers, preventing paperwork mix-ups and other bank confusion which lead to improper foreclosures, and establish an independent party to review whether banks have followed the rules on foreclosures.

OCC policy already bans the dual-track system unless the process is required by mortgage bond agreements, but the OCC is yet to enforce that ban with any sanction against banks that violate it.

The potential impact of other elements in Merkley’s plan is less clear. He would implement a “short-refinance” plan, which would allow homeowners who owe more on their loan than their house is worth to refinance into a new loan at the current value of their home. Government agencies would then pay the existing bank to expunge the remaining debt levels. But Baker was skeptical that such a program would be workable. With home prices down dramatically nationwide from their bubble-level peaks, even outright housing speculators will be sure to seek relief, triggering a government payout to the very banks who caused the problem by lending recklessly in the midst of a bubble. “There is not going to be any plausible means test that you can put in place that will prevent almost anyone in this situation from taking advantage of the opportunity,” Baker said.

Merkley would also provide a $5,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers in an effort to boost home sales. But Baker said such an arrangement is unlikely to be an efficient mechanism to lift the struggling housing market.

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Tax preparation companies offer lots of free filing options – USA Today

By Sandra Block, USA TODAY

Even though we’re three weeks into 2011, it’s not too late to make New Year’s resolutions. And here’s one that’s a lot easier than giving up chocolate or beer: Resolve to tackle your own tax return.

More than 60% of taxpayers pay a tax preparer to do their returns every year. While that makes a lot of sense for people with complex returns, more than 20 million Americans file a 1040EZ, the tax form for taxpayers who don’t itemize, claim no dependents and earn less than $100,000 a year. If you fall into that category — or use the slightly longer Form 1040A — you can save a lot of money by doing your own tax return this year. And thanks to technology, you don’t need to delve into the tax code to get the job done properly.

Saving money isn’t the only reason you should consider doing your own taxes. Preparing your tax return forces you to take a hard look at how much money you earned last year, after taxes. If you contributed to a 401(k) plan, you’ll realize how much your contributions reduce your tax bill. And that might provide the kick in the pants you need to save a little more.

Tax software companies, eager to attract new business, have gone to great lengths to make tax preparation easy, if not exactly fun. Last week, TurboTax released SnapTax, a mobile phone application that allows users to file their federal and state taxes on their smartphones. SnapTax, which costs $14.99 to e-file a federal and state tax return, is limited to taxpayers who file a 1040EZ.

Other sources of low- or no-cost tax preparation:

•IRS Free File. This partnership between the IRS and tax software companies is designed to encourage more taxpayers to file their returns electronically, which reduces errors and saves the government money. Taxpayers with 2010 adjusted gross income of $58,000 or less are eligible to use the program.

This year, 17 private companies and one non-profit are participating in Free File. In addition to the $58,000 AGI cutoff, participating companies can have their own criteria. For example, H&R Block Free File is limited to taxpayers who are 51 or younger. TaxSlayer’s free offering is limited to taxpayers who are 25 or younger or 65 or older. Other participating companies limit participation based on your state of residence, military status or eligibility for the Earned Income Tax Credit.

All of the programs will prepare and e-file one federal tax return for free. In addition, 21 states offer a State Free File program that allows eligible taxpayers to prepare and file one state tax return. You can find a list of those states, along with more information about the federal program, at freefile.irs.gov.

•Free tax preparation online programs. Even if you’re not eligible for Free File, you may be able to prepare and file your federal tax return online for free. TurboTax and H&R Block at Home both offer free editions for taxpayers who file a 1040EZ or other simple tax return, with no income restrictions. TaxAct’s free edition provides tax preparation and e-filing for one federal return, with no restrictions on income or type of return.

The growth of Free File, now in its eighth year, “has created a private marketplace for free tax preparation products,” says David Williams, senior vice president for the IRS.

Keep in mind that tax software companies are in the business of making money. If you use one of the free programs, you’ll probably have to fend off a lot of pitches to upgrade to a paid product. You’ll also have to pay to file a state tax return.

Of course, you can always file your tax return for free by doing it the old-school way: with a pencil and paper. In that case, all you pay is postage. But this year, that method will require some extra effort. For the first time, the IRS won’t mail tax forms and instructions to taxpayers who filed manually in the past. If you want the forms, you’ll either have to download them from irs.gov, or call 800-829-3676 to request them. Tax forms and booklets will be available at some libraries and post offices, but the IRS has limited that distribution, too, Williams says.

“It’s primarily a cost-saving issue,” Williams says. “It turns out that many of those forms ended up being in the trash.”

There is an alternative for penny-pinchers who don’t need a lot of hand-holding: Free File Fillable Forms. This program provides electronic versions of tax forms that you can fill out and file for free. The program will do the math but won’t provide guidance, Williams says. It’s available at irs.gov.

Sandra Block covers personal finance for USA TODAY. Her Your Money column appears Tuesdays. E-mail her at: sblock@usatoday.com. Follow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sandyblock

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The mystery of Bill Daley – Washington Post (blog)

Posted at 10:57 AM ET, 01/ 6/2011

By Ezra Klein

Thumbnail image for daleyonmtp.JPG

Imagine I told you that one of the candidates President Obama is considering for chief of staff opposed the creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, opposed doing health-care reform and led the Chamber of Commerce’s effort to loosen the post-Enron regulations on the accounting and auditing professions. His major qualification for the job is that he’s extremely well liked by the business community, in part because he routinely advocates for their interests and in part because he’s a top executive at J.P. Morgan. His theory of politics is that the Democratic Party has become too liberal and needs to tack right. Last year, he doubled down on that argument by joining the board of Third Way.

Now imagine I told you that one of the candidates President Obama is considering for chief of staff has been endorsed by Howard Dean as a “huge plus” for the Obama administration and previously chaired Al Gore’s 2000 presidential campaign. Dean, of course, was the great liberal hope in 2004, and has been a key voice for progressives ever since. Gore’s 2000 campaign was a notably populist effort, in tone if not in content.

Now imagine I told you they were the same guy.

This is the mystery of William Daley. Reports suggest that he’ll be named Obama’s chief of staff fairly soon, perhaps as early as tomorrow. But how is it that a centrist banker who opposed the Obama administration’s signature initiatives has such a large constituency among liberal political types both inside and outside the White House?

Daley certainly has his backers. The Obama administration, home to many liberals, clearly likes him. So does Howard Dean, and so did Al Gore. He’s apparently quite popular among business leaders, as well. His performance shepherding NAFTA through the Congress certainly sounds like it was an impressive political feat, whatever you think of the underlying legislation.

Perhaps Daley is simply an obscenely good executive vice president type: He seems to have impressed everyone who could one day promote him, alienated virtually no one (or at least no one who has come forward publicly) and effectively advocated for the interests of whoever happened to be paying him at the time.

Or maybe the answer is that the Obama administration has simply decided to tack right, and they figure the way to do that is to hire someone who legitimately believes that tacking right is a good idea. I don’t find Daley’s theory of politics persuasive, but if you wanted to get credit in the media for moving to the right, it’d help to hire someone who had publicly and clearly attacked your moves to the left.

But the evidence here really doesn’t add up. Dean wanted more a vastly more progressive administration, but he likes the guy who wanted a vastly less progressive administration. The administration likes its own record but appears interested in hiring someone who doesn’t. There’s a widespread perception that the White House is too close to Wall Street, but the leading candidate for chief of staff is a top executive at J.P. Morgan. Oh, and he was on the board of Fannie Mae, too.

The Daley pick seems like a bad idea to me. The particular theory of politics he espouses seems woefully detached from the realities of the modern partisan environment — as Jon Chait says, it effectively means “allowing extreme positions to redefine the parameters of the debate.” But you can certainly read this post as evidence that Daley is a singular political talent, and the Obama administration would be well served by hiring someone able to sustain these sorts of contradictions.

If anyone has seen very persuasive arguments for or against Daley elsewhere, link them in the comments. I’m particularly interested in testimonials from people who’ve worked with or against him.

Photo credit: “Meet the Press.”

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By Ezra Klein  | January 6, 2011; 10:57 AM ET Categories:  Obama administration   Save & Share:  Send E-mail   Facebook   Twitter   Digg   Yahoo Buzz   Del.icio.us   StumbleUpon   Technorati   Google Buzz   Previous: Will symbolism be enough for the tea parties?Next: Repealing health-care reform would cost $230 billion over 10 years — and more after that

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Free Shipping Promotion Entices Last-Minute Santas – NPR

It’s “Free Shipping Day,” a day when more than 1,700 businesses are offering free shipping with delivery by Christmas Eve. Many well-known businesses and online retailers are taking part, but so too are many small businesses. Melissa Block talks with Jean Schilling, owner of Kaleidoscopes to You, about why her company is participating in the promotion.

Copyright © 2010 National Public Radio®. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

MELISSA BLOCK, host:

If you’re still doing some holiday shopping, consider that today is free shipping day. The online movement started in 2008 with 250 businesses promising free shipping and delivery by Christmas Eve. Well, this year, some 1,700 businesses are taking part. Big companies like Dell Computers, Saks Fifth Avenue and Mattel.

Also, tiny companies like Where the Streets Have Your Name. They sell framed photos of street signs like Melissa Drive or Robert Lane. And then there’s the family-owned business, Kaleidoscopes To You. Karl and Jean Schilling have been selling kaleidoscopes for more than 20 years. And Jean Schilling joins us now from company headquarters in Manly, Iowa. Jean, taking a little break from your work to talk to us, thanks.

Ms. JEAN SCHILLING (Owner, Kaleidoscopes To You): Actually, Melissa, it’s nice to sit down for a few moments.

(Soundbite of laughter)

BLOCK: It’s been a little busy today?

Ms. SCHILLING: Very busy. It’s been a wonderful season for us. This is our strongest season in the last three years.

BLOCK: Let’s talk about the free shipping. Usually you offer free shipping on orders $150 or more, but today it’s free shipping across the board. Why’d you do that?

Ms. SCHILLING: Well, how this works, this is our first year taking part. And we thought, you know, this is a fun way to try and drive some more traffic to our business. And it really has. The traffic that we’re seeing on our website is more than double what we had yesterday.

BLOCK: Well, have you figured out the math? I mean, is there sort of a tipping point at which, you know, the money that you’re spending on shipping is outweighed by the sales, the increased sales you’re getting.

Ms. SCHILLING: Yes. I would say any order under the $35, $40 bracket we will lose money on today. But we thought, let’s give it a try. We figure we’ll have enough orders over that range where we won’t lose money on the shipping and let’s drive the traffic. And, you know, there’s a few orders where it’s a single $6 kaleidoscope and, you bet, we’re going to ship it free for today. And that’s part of the fun of it. We’re getting kaleidoscopes out there for people to get into Christmas stockings.

BLOCK: It’s the right shape, isn’t it?

Ms. SCHILLING: Exactly. It’s long, it’s cylindrical, it fits right in there. We’ve even had Santa Claus order a few kaleidoscopes.

BLOCK: Is that right?

Ms. SCHILLING: Yeah.

BLOCK: You know, I wonder if people get used to the notion of free shipping and then we expect it all the time. We don’t want to pay for shipping after we know what it’s like not to.

Ms. SCHILLING: That day may come. You know, it may like long distance. Think about what you spent on long distance 30 years ago and what you spend on it now. And I’m sure it’s less. So, I don’t know. We’ll have to see how that shapes in the future.

BLOCK: In the meantime, the UPS man or woman in your neighborhood today is getting a little bit of an extra workout, it sounds like.

Ms. SCHILLING: Yes. We have great service from our local UPS driver. I better give a shout out to Dan(ph). Why not?

(Soundbite of laughter)

Ms. SCHILLING: They’re a fabulous team around here. He’ll come in and say, man, you guys really worked hard today.

(Soundbite of laughter)

BLOCK: Well, Jean Schilling, have a happy holiday and thanks for talking with us.

Ms. SCHILLING: Absolutely. Thanks for your time, Melissa.

BLOCK: Jean Schilling and her husband own Kaleidoscopes to You in Manly, Iowa. It’s one of more than 1,700 businesses taking part in free shipping day today.

Copyright © 2010 National Public Radio®. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR’s prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

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Why you should go see Christina Perri at WRMF’s No Snow Ball – Palm Beach Post

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Live Shows, Local music, Music, Music News, Pop Shop  |  December 04, 2010

Free shows are a gift in themselves – as much money as the holidays cost most of us, a good show with musicians you’ve actually heard of put on at no cost to you in like a musical bow on top of a big fat present. WRMF’s No Snow Ball features Sara Bareilles, who you may have met when she explained that she wasn’t gonna write you a “Love Song,” and the electric Michael Franti and Spearhead, who you may have met at their energy-charged SunFest show in 2009.

But the Ball also features singer Ryan Star (who was a contestant on CBS’ “Rock Star: Supernova”, and the lovely Christina Perri (seen here), whose success is not only a tale of technology and gumption, but also as a Palm Beach County connection (doesn’t that seem to happen a lot lately?)

The Pennsylvania native moved out to L.A. to try to make it, but got nowhere until a friend sent a YouTube clip of her performing, that was recorded in her bedroom, to someone in the business. And then, choreographer Stacey Tookey was given a copy of her song “Jar of Hearts” and used it in a dance routine featuring Kathryn McCormick and our own Billy Bell. It took off, and now Perri, who was supplementing her art while waiting tables, has hit the big time. Her EP “the Ocean Way Sessions” just came out last month, and you can hear it live tonight at 7:30 at the Centre for the Arts at Mizner Park in Boca!

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