Sentence examples for fiscal gain from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(1)

'fiscal gain' is a correct and usable part of a sentence in written English.
It can be used to refer to a monetary gain or profit earned by an individual or company that has been acquired through fiscal (monetary or financial) means. For example: "The company achieved a substantial fiscal gain from its investments in overseas markets."

Exact(8)

"Sounds to me like life as a secretary at the FA's pretty gosh-darned exciting, and seems to offer ample opportunities for fiscal gain," says Louise Wright.

The group called the amendment "a short-term fiscal gain for the state at the long-term expense of students, consumers and the public".

With $2m they hit airwaves casting the debate in terms of civil rights, jobs, fiscal gain (claiming $60m in savings and revenue) and state autonomy.

They are busy fighting their own budget deficits and view a potential fiscal gain for the federal government as a likely loss for them.

The NRC study noted that the fiscal gain from immigrants was spread fairly evenly across the United States, but that the burden on states varied, depending on the type of immigrants they attracted.

But it did say that conditions in the United States, such as a younger immigrant base and more limited public benefit programs than European countries, made it more likely to experience a net fiscal gain from immigration.

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Similar(50)

He said Russia today was roughly where Poland was in 1993 or 1994, a year or two before social and fiscal gains began barreling in.

In the social welfare states of Western Europe, in particular, increasing the employment rate of immigrants relative to native-born workers "would result in substantial fiscal gains," the study found.

Turning to the City, the report argued: "A Brexit would cut into the financial industry's outsized contributions to the UK economy, tax revenues and trade balance, we believe, and offset apparent fiscal gains from leaving the EU".

A return to negative growth would not only hit businesses and households directly, but by shrinking the revenue base, could also wipe out many of the fiscal gains the government's tax increases and spending cuts are designed to deliver.

The problem with all previous rounds here has been that austerity policies depress the economy to such an extent that it wipes out most of the topline fiscal gains: revenue fall, so does GDP, so the projected debt/GDP ratio gets, if anything, worse.

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