John Hasler wrote:
> Markus writes:
>
>> the difference between a tax and a tarrif is that taxes are a percentage
>> and tarrifs are a flat amount, also tarrifs are typically collected for a
>> specific purpose rather than general tax coffers.
>>
>
> Taxes of this sort are common in agricul
Markus writes:
> the difference between a tax and a tarrif is that taxes are a percentage
> and tarrifs are a flat amount, also tarrifs are typically collected for a
> specific purpose rather than general tax coffers.
Taxes of this sort are common in agriculture in the US.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL
Hi Guys,
I will take this opportunity to clairify this point a little. I don't
know if there are any other Canadians on this group but our gov't
loves tarrif's*. There are about 20 that I can think of off the top
of my head but a common one that I know several state's charge as well
is a recy
Hi Chris,
Thanks for your email. Markus and Brad discussed this case. In fact, they
accept it as Tariff, so we will use the same logic of the Assembly form.
which means, we will create a Tariff table to join between the product and
the Tariff which we add it in parts table.
In this case
Hi Chris,
Thanks for your email. Markus and Brad discussed this case. In fact, they
accept it as Tariff, so we will use the same logic of the Assembly form.
which means, we will create a Tariff table to join between the product and
the Tariff which we add it in parts table.
In this case