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Page "Santa Claus, Indiana" ¶ 17
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per and capita
In order to assist the States in maintaining basic vocational rehabilitation services, Section 2 of the amended Act provides that allotments to States for support of such services be based on ( 1 ) need, as measured by a State's population, and ( 2 ) fiscal capacity, as measured by its per capita income.
These provisions are designed to reflect the differences in wealth and population among the States, with the objective that a vocationally handicapped person have access to needed services regardless of whether he resides in a State with a low or high per capita income or a sparsely or thickly populated State.
For each State ( except Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, and, prior to 1962, Alaska and Hawaii ) determine average per capita income based on the last three years.
( See Source of Data, below for per capita income data to be used in this step.
Determine the average per capita income for the U. S. based on the last three years.
( See Source of Data, below, for per capita income data to be used in this step.
Determine the ratio of 50% to the average per capita income of the U. S. ( Divide 50 by the result obtained in item 2 above.
Determine for each State ( except the Virgin Islands, Guam and Puerto Rico, and, prior to 1962, Alaska and Hawaii ) that percentage which bears the same ratio to 50% as the particular State's average per capita income bears to the average per capita income of the U. S..
For each State ( except the Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, and, prior to 1962, Alaska and Hawaii ), determine the average per capita income for the last three years.
Determine the average per capita income for the United States for the last three years.
Determine the ratio of 40% to the average per capita income of the United States.
Determine for each State ( except the Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, and, prior to 1962, Alaska and Hawaii ), that percentage which bears the same ration to 40% as the particular State's average per capita income bears to the average per capita income of the United States.
The basic state grant is thirty cents for each person served, and there is a further book incentive grant that provides an extra twenty cents up to fifty cents per capita, if a library spends a certain number of dollars.
For example, per capita GDP gives an approximation of the arithmetic average income of a nation's population.
per capita: 977 m³ / yr ( 2000 )
The Gross Domestic Product of Armenia stood at 8. 8 billion US dollars in 2010 ; with a population of 3. 2 million, this amounts to a GDP per capita of $ 2, 676 ( purchasing power parity $ 5, 178 ).
In comparison, in 2006, the GDP was estimated to be 6. 6 billion USD per calendar year and the GDP per capita ( purchasing power parity ) was estimated at $ 5, 400 US.
GDP ( per capita ): $ 6, 400 ( 2008 )

per and income
Net income was $2,557,111, or $3.11 per share on 821,220 common shares currently outstanding, as compared to $2,323,867 or $2.82 per share in 1959, adjusted to the same number of shares.
For investors whose income is taxed at high rates, though, a tax-free yield of 4 per cent is high.
It is the equivalent of 8 per cent for an unmarried investor with more than $16,000 of income to be taxed, or for a married couple with more than $32,000 of taxed income.
Amartya Sen's Development as Freedom ( Nobel Prize in Economics, 1999 ), argues that third world development must be understood as the expansion of human capability, not simply the increase in national income per capita, and thus requires policies attuned to health and education, not simply GDP.

per and for
Even with the increase in funds for the next fiscal year, Georgia will be spending only around $3.15 per day per patient.
His successor, Secretary Goldberg, also has been guessing wrong on a drop in the unemployment rate which has been holding just under 7 per cent for the last 11 months.
February's volume was 1 per cent above January's for the first pickup since last October, although it's still 1.5 per cent off from February 1960.
In Newark, for example, this gain was put at 26 per cent above the year-earlier level.
This periodical, including weekly statistical supplements, is available for $4 per year from Commerce Field Offices or Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D.C..
Cars were operated in 1959 for an average $.027 per mile.
Of these states the average `` change-over '' point ( at which a car is substituted for allowances ) is 13,200 miles per year.
Actual mileage allowances are itemized reimbursements allowed employees for the use of personally-owned vehicles on state business at the rate of $.07 per mile.
Rhode Island's reimburseable rate of $.07 per mile for use of personally-owned cars compares favorably with other states' rates.
for example, if one driver puts on 22,000 miles per year and another driver 8,000 miles per year, their cars will be switched so that both cars will have 30,000 miles after two years, rather than 44,000 miles ( and related higher maintenance costs ) and 16,000 miles respectively ''.
Pool records reveal in detail the cost per mile and miles per gallon of each vehicle, the miles traveled in one year or three years, the periods when vehicle costs become excessive, and when cars should be traded for sound economies.
Newspaper advertising was mainly concentrated in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal ( Eastern and Midwestern editions ) which averaged two prominent ads per month, and to a lesser degree the New York Herald Tribune and, for the west coast, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal ( Pacific Coast edition ).
Such payments shall be made to small domestic producers of lead as long as the market price for common lead at New York, New York, as determined by the Secretary, is below 14-1/2 cents per pound, and such payments shall be 75 per centum of the difference between 14-1/2 cents per pound and the average market price for the month in which the sale occurred as determined by the Secretary.
Such payments shall be made to small domestic producers of zinc as long as the market price for prime western zinc at East Saint Louis, Illinois, as determined by the Secretary, is below 14-1/2 cents per pound, and such payments shall be 55 per centum of the difference between 14-1/2 cents per pound and the average market price for the month in which the sale occurred as determined by the Secretary.

per and town
The per capita income for the town was $ 28, 199.
The per capita income for the town was $ 18, 029.
The per capita income for the town was $ 30, 393.
The per capita income for the town was $ 23, 063.
The per capita income for the town was $ 17, 999.
The per capita income for the town is $ 19, 087.
When USC opened in 1880, tuition was $ 15. 00 per term and students were not allowed to leave town without the knowledge and consent of the university president.
The per capita income for the town was $ 25, 712.
The per capita income for the town was $ 38, 832.
The per capita income for the town was $ 16, 872.
Meurman resigned from the board of governors of the Housing Foundation in 1954 following a shift from developing a town with low population density ( six persons per acre ) and low-rise buildings dwellings, as advocated by Meurman, to more multi-storey buildings and a higher population density ( 30 persons per acre ) as recommended by other architects and the Housing Foundation.
The per capita income for the town was $ 50, 305.
The per capita income for the town was $ 8, 897.
The per capita income for the town was $ 35, 919.
The per capita income for the town was $ 29, 638.
The per capita income for the town was $ 15, 983.
The per capita income for the town was $ 22, 960.
Between 1970 and 1995, the population of Benicia grew steadily at a rate of about 1, 000 people per year, and the city changed from a poor, blue-collar town of 7, 000 to a white-collar bedroom suburb of 28, 000.
It was then accerlerated by Lord John Russell's instructions that all lands out of town boundaries to be sold at only £ 1 per acre.
In a 2006 survey the people of Boston were labelled as being the fattest in the country .< ref >< http :// www. timesonline. co. uk / tol / news / uk / article601137. ece ></ ref > Another report, cited in " The Sun " in 2008, highlighted the fact that Boston has the highest number of immigrants per capita of any town in Britain ( an estimated 1 / 4 of the population are immigrants ).
The per capita income for the town was $ 35, 796.
The per capita income for the town was $ 37, 063.
The per capita income for the town was $ 38, 674.
In the spring of 1788, Samuel Wright had the area surveyed and formally laid out the town into 160 building lots, which were distributed by lottery at 15 shillings per ticket.

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