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national+income

  • 1 renta nacional

    Diccionario geografía española-Inglés > renta nacional

  • 2 ingreso nacional

    • national importations
    • national income
    • national income accounting
    • National Registry of Foreigners
    • national revenue
    • National Science Foundation

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > ingreso nacional

  • 3 importaciones nacionales

    • national holiday
    • National Housing Fund
    • national importations
    • national imports
    • national income

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > importaciones nacionales

  • 4 contabilidad de la renta nacional

    • national imports
    • national income accounting
    • National Industrial Conference Board

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > contabilidad de la renta nacional

  • 5 industria nacional

    • national income accounting
    • national industry
    • National Industry Association of Perú

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > industria nacional

  • 6 Junta Consultiva Industrial Nacional

    • national income
    • National Industrial Conference Board
    • national industry

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > Junta Consultiva Industrial Nacional

  • 7 renta nacional per capita

    Diccionario geografía española-Inglés > renta nacional per capita

  • 8 renta

    f.
    1 income (ingresos).
    vivir de las rentas to live off one's (private) income
    renta del capital capital yield
    renta fija fixed income
    renta per cápita o por habitante per capita income
    renta del trabajo wage income
    renta variable/vitalicia variable/life annuity
    2 rent.
    3 return (beneficios).
    4 interest (intereses).
    5 national or public debt.
    pres.indicat.
    3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: rentar.
    imperat.
    2nd person singular (tú) Imperative of Spanish verb: rentar.
    * * *
    1 (ingresos) income
    3 (beneficio) interest, return
    4 (alquiler) rent
    \
    vivir de sus rentas to live on one's income
    renta fija fixed interest security
    renta fiscal taxable income
    renta nacional national income
    renta per cápita per capita income
    renta pública government debt
    renta variable equity securities plural
    renta vitalicia life annuity
    * * *
    SF
    1) (=ingresos) income; (=ganancia) interest, return

    política de rentasincomes o (EEUU) income policy

    2) (=deuda) public debt, national debt
    3) esp LAm (=alquiler) rent
    * * *
    1) ( beneficio) income

    rentas derivadas de capitales/del trabajo personal — unearned/earned income

    vivir de las rentas: tiene dinero/propiedades y vive de las rentas she has some money and lives off the interest/some properties and lives off the rents; un escritor que lleva años viviendo de las rentas — a writer who has been living off past glories for years

    2) (esp Méx) ( alquiler) rent
    * * *
    ----
    * declaración de la renta = tax return, income tax, income tax return, income tax statement.
    * impreso de declaración de la renta = income tax form, tax form.
    * impuesto sobre la renta = income tax.
    * receptor de renta vitalicia = annuitant.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * rentas públicas = revenues.
    * renta vitalicia = annuity trust, annuity.
    * vivir de las rentas = live off + the fat of the land.
    * * *
    1) ( beneficio) income

    rentas derivadas de capitales/del trabajo personal — unearned/earned income

    vivir de las rentas: tiene dinero/propiedades y vive de las rentas she has some money and lives off the interest/some properties and lives off the rents; un escritor que lleva años viviendo de las rentas — a writer who has been living off past glories for years

    2) (esp Méx) ( alquiler) rent
    * * *
    * declaración de la renta = tax return, income tax, income tax return, income tax statement.
    * impreso de declaración de la renta = income tax form, tax form.
    * impuesto sobre la renta = income tax.
    * receptor de renta vitalicia = annuitant.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * rentas públicas = revenues.
    * renta vitalicia = annuity trust, annuity.
    * vivir de las rentas = live off + the fat of the land.
    * * *
    A (beneficio) income
    rentas derivadas de capitales/del trabajo personal unearned/earned income
    inversiones de renta fija/variable fixed/variable interest investments
    le proporciona una renta anual de $100.000 it provides him with o brings in an annual income of $100,000
    puso el dinero en el banco y vive de las rentas he put the money in the bank and he lives off the interest
    era muy famoso y aún vive de las rentas he used to be very famous and he's still living off his reputation
    impuesto2 (↑ impuesto (2))
    Compuestos:
    customs duties (pl)
    ( ingresos) fixed income; (valores) fixed income securities
    renta gravable or imponible
    taxable income
    national income
    income per capita, per capita income
    ( ingresos) variable income; (valores) variable income securities
    (life) annuity
    B (alquiler) rent
    Compuesto:
    fixed rent
    pagar renta antigua to be a sitting tenant, to pay a fixed rent
    * * *

     

    Del verbo rentar: ( conjugate rentar)

    renta es:

    3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo

    2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo

    Multiple Entries:
    renta    
    rentar
    renta sustantivo femenino


    vivir de las rentas ( de dinero) to live off the interest;

    ( de propiedades) to live off the rent
    b) (esp Méx) ( alquiler) rent

    rentar ( conjugate rentar) verbo transitivo (Méx)

    [ usuario] to rent
    b) coche to rent, hire (BrE)

    renta sustantivo femenino
    1 (ingresos) income
    (por trabajo) earned income
    vivir de las rentas, to live off o on private income
    renta vitalicia, annuity
    2 (alquiler) rent
    rentar verbo transitivo Econ to produce a profit, yield
    ' renta' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    declaración
    - deducirse
    - impuesta
    - impuesto
    - ingreso
    - IRPF
    - pensión
    - vitalicia
    - vitalicio
    - alquiler
    - asignación
    - asignar
    - líquido
    - vivir
    English:
    equity
    - income tax
    - private income
    - return
    - revenue
    - tax
    - tax return
    - income
    - rent
    - rental
    * * *
    renta nf
    1. [ingresos] income;
    vivir de las rentas to live off one's (private) income;
    Fam
    sacan un disco de éxito y luego, a vivir de las rentas they bring out one hit record and then sit back and live off the profits
    renta per cápita per capita income;
    renta gravable taxable income;
    renta por habitante per capita income;
    renta imponible taxable income;
    renta nacional national income;
    renta del trabajo earned income;
    renta vitalicia life annuity
    2. [alquiler] rent
    3. [beneficios] return
    renta del capital capital yield
    4. [intereses] interest
    renta fija fixed (interest) rate;
    acciones de renta fija fixed-interest esp Br shares o esp US stock(s);
    renta variable variable (interest) rate;
    acciones de renta variable variable-interest esp Br shares o esp US stock(s);
    los mercados de renta variable the equity markets
    5. [deuda pública] national o public debt
    * * *
    f
    1 ( ingresos) income
    2 de casa rent
    3
    :
    de renta fija fixed-interest
    * * *
    renta nf
    1) : income
    2) : rent
    3)

    Spanish-English dictionary > renta

  • 9 renta per cápita

    per capita income
    * * *
    * * *
    (n.) = national income, per capita income
    Ex. Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex. The direct causes of per capita income and living standard increases are technologies, new and old.
    * * *
    * * *
    (n.) = national income, per capita income

    Ex: Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.

    Ex: The direct causes of per capita income and living standard increases are technologies, new and old.

    * * *
    income per capita

    Spanish-English dictionary > renta per cápita

  • 10 renta nacional

    f.
    national income, gross national product, national revenue.
    * * *
    national income
    * * *
    * * *

    Spanish-English dictionary > renta nacional

  • 11 renta nacional

    • gross national income
    • gross national product
    • gross negligence
    • national importations
    • national income
    • national income accounting
    • National Registry of Foreigners
    • national revenue
    • National Science Foundation

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > renta nacional

  • 12 cápita

    ----
    * per cápita = per capita.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * * *
    * per cápita = per capita.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * * *

    Spanish-English dictionary > cápita

  • 13 per

    ----
    * madreperla = mother of pearl.
    * per cápita = per capita.
    * per se = per se.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * * *
    * madreperla = mother of pearl.
    * per cápita = per capita.
    * per se = per se.
    * renta per cápita = national income, per capita income.
    * * *
    PER [per] nm (abrev de Plan de Empleo Rural)
    = Spanish government project to support rural employment

    Spanish-English dictionary > per

  • 14 cada vez mayor

    (adj.) = escalating, ever-growing, ever-increasing, expanded, growing, increasing, mounting, rising, spiralling [spiraling, -USA], deepening, rapidly growing, expanding, constantly rising, swelling, ever larger [ever-larger], galloping, steadily rising, steadily growing, mushrooming, ever greater, rapidly expanding, ever-widening, burgeoning, heightening
    Ex. Findings emphasised the escalating deprivation of applied social scientists in general and the local government and voluntary sectors in particular.
    Ex. To gauge the full impact on the BNB one must add to these Arabic publications half a dozen books in Kurdish, not forgetting the ever-growing list of translations of oriental works.
    Ex. Up to and including the fourteenth edition progress led to ever-increasing detail.
    Ex. Co-operatives have played a much more extensive role in recent years and are set to continue in their expanded role.
    Ex. Yet another variable factor is the growing presence of full text data bases.
    Ex. The final order on the shelves is the reverse of this, so that an order of increasing speciality is achieved.
    Ex. If the approach is not too blinkered, such situations, on the basis of mounting evidence, quickly lead to the realisation that technological solutions to information problems are at best partial.
    Ex. But the good times ran out and the world recession of the 1970s brought rising inflation, unemployment and increasing pressure for better social services.
    Ex. The ARL Serials Project is an initiative by the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) designed to combat the spiralling increases in periodicals prices.
    Ex. The period from World War 2 to the present day saw the quickened pace and deepening specialisation of researches.
    Ex. The scheme was designed by the Library of Congress staff to be tailor-made for their own library with its immense and rapidly growing stock and with its bias towards law and the social sciences.
    Ex. There is an expanding interest in the idea of local government information services on the part of public libraries.
    Ex. Recently there has been more than the usual talk about the exceptionally-high and constantly-rising costs of scholarly journals and what scholar, editors, and libraries can do about the situation.
    Ex. By far the most difficult new challenge looming for librarianship will be preserving and providing access to 'born-digital' materials, that swelling mass of material that appears only in electronic form.
    Ex. Technology plays an ever larger role in the delivery of services in libraries of all sizes.
    Ex. But the introduction of market economics, galloping inflation and the breakdown of old administrative structures are causing problems, especially over funding..
    Ex. Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex. The strategy is to maintain a steadily growing base line which can expand in better times.
    Ex. The position of the library as source provider has been eroded in an age of information explosions and mushrooming technology.
    Ex. The results has been an ever greater obfuscation of what constitutes the profession of librarianship.
    Ex. A rapidly expanding number of organizations have begun to use high performance, completely digital networks, such as the Internet.
    Ex. The inter-library loan network operates like a spiral with the individual library at the centre and the local, regional, national and international back-up services forming an ever-widening circle around it.
    Ex. It was apparent that the responders to the investigation were somewhat unsure of their future situation relative to the burgeoning information education market = Era claro que los entrevistados en la investigacion no se sentían muy seguros sobre su situación futura en relación con el incipiente mercado de las enseñanzas de documentación.
    Ex. The rising tension over the Olympic torch relay is heightening concerns whether this summer's Games will be clouded by political rancor.
    * * *
    (adj.) = escalating, ever-growing, ever-increasing, expanded, growing, increasing, mounting, rising, spiralling [spiraling, -USA], deepening, rapidly growing, expanding, constantly rising, swelling, ever larger [ever-larger], galloping, steadily rising, steadily growing, mushrooming, ever greater, rapidly expanding, ever-widening, burgeoning, heightening

    Ex: Findings emphasised the escalating deprivation of applied social scientists in general and the local government and voluntary sectors in particular.

    Ex: To gauge the full impact on the BNB one must add to these Arabic publications half a dozen books in Kurdish, not forgetting the ever-growing list of translations of oriental works.
    Ex: Up to and including the fourteenth edition progress led to ever-increasing detail.
    Ex: Co-operatives have played a much more extensive role in recent years and are set to continue in their expanded role.
    Ex: Yet another variable factor is the growing presence of full text data bases.
    Ex: The final order on the shelves is the reverse of this, so that an order of increasing speciality is achieved.
    Ex: If the approach is not too blinkered, such situations, on the basis of mounting evidence, quickly lead to the realisation that technological solutions to information problems are at best partial.
    Ex: But the good times ran out and the world recession of the 1970s brought rising inflation, unemployment and increasing pressure for better social services.
    Ex: The ARL Serials Project is an initiative by the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) designed to combat the spiralling increases in periodicals prices.
    Ex: The period from World War 2 to the present day saw the quickened pace and deepening specialisation of researches.
    Ex: The scheme was designed by the Library of Congress staff to be tailor-made for their own library with its immense and rapidly growing stock and with its bias towards law and the social sciences.
    Ex: There is an expanding interest in the idea of local government information services on the part of public libraries.
    Ex: Recently there has been more than the usual talk about the exceptionally-high and constantly-rising costs of scholarly journals and what scholar, editors, and libraries can do about the situation.
    Ex: By far the most difficult new challenge looming for librarianship will be preserving and providing access to 'born-digital' materials, that swelling mass of material that appears only in electronic form.
    Ex: Technology plays an ever larger role in the delivery of services in libraries of all sizes.
    Ex: But the introduction of market economics, galloping inflation and the breakdown of old administrative structures are causing problems, especially over funding..
    Ex: Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex: The strategy is to maintain a steadily growing base line which can expand in better times.
    Ex: The position of the library as source provider has been eroded in an age of information explosions and mushrooming technology.
    Ex: The results has been an ever greater obfuscation of what constitutes the profession of librarianship.
    Ex: A rapidly expanding number of organizations have begun to use high performance, completely digital networks, such as the Internet.
    Ex: The inter-library loan network operates like a spiral with the individual library at the centre and the local, regional, national and international back-up services forming an ever-widening circle around it.
    Ex: It was apparent that the responders to the investigation were somewhat unsure of their future situation relative to the burgeoning information education market = Era claro que los entrevistados en la investigacion no se sentían muy seguros sobre su situación futura en relación con el incipiente mercado de las enseñanzas de documentación.
    Ex: The rising tension over the Olympic torch relay is heightening concerns whether this summer's Games will be clouded by political rancor.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cada vez mayor

  • 15 renta

    nf
    income n, rent n
    renta anual yearly income
    renta fija fixed income
    renta nacional national income
    renta privada private income

    Spanish-English Business Glossary > renta

  • 16 cada vez menor

    (adj.) = decreasing, dwindling, diminishing, thinning, fading, waning, declining, falling, shrinking, receding, sinking, ebbing, descending
    Ex. It is impossible to read the library press today without reading about the increasing costs of maintaining, and the decreasing budgets of libraries, and particularly about the increasing costs of technical services.
    Ex. Squeezed between the upper and nether milestones of increasing demand and dwindling resources, individual librarians develop ways in which to make their jobs easier.
    Ex. It is remarkable how, in an economy with diminishing job opportunities, librarians compensate for their inability to demonstrate the value of their skills by seeking the protection of educational and certification requirements.
    Ex. News of boundless timber reserves spread, and before long lumberjacks from the thinning hardwood forests of New England swarmed into the uncharted area with no other possessions than their axes and brawn and the clothing they wore.
    Ex. With the fading significance of these physical forms, some of the rationale for unit entries has disappeared.
    Ex. This article discusses the impact of growing number of students and waning financial resources on library services and acquisition focusing on book shortages, security problems and inadequacy of staffing.
    Ex. The public library is a complex institution, evolving through many decades of human history and colliding today with the perplexing realities of change, declining funding, and shifting purpose.
    Ex. As well as cuts imposed by the Government, libraries were faced with inflation in the price of books and periodicals, and a falling rate of exchange between the pound and the dollar.
    Ex. Many challenges lie ahead for those selling children's books with increased competition and shrinking profit margins.
    Ex. Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex. It has not yet been decided what strategies libraries will use to face the crisis of rising personnel costs and sinking funds for book acquisitions.
    Ex. Every publisher, materials vendor, systems vendor and bibliographic utility that serve libraries face sharp competition for a share of the ebbing library market.
    Ex. The second reason is that companies have to take care of costs to meet the descending price rate of the market.
    * * *
    (adj.) = decreasing, dwindling, diminishing, thinning, fading, waning, declining, falling, shrinking, receding, sinking, ebbing, descending

    Ex: It is impossible to read the library press today without reading about the increasing costs of maintaining, and the decreasing budgets of libraries, and particularly about the increasing costs of technical services.

    Ex: Squeezed between the upper and nether milestones of increasing demand and dwindling resources, individual librarians develop ways in which to make their jobs easier.
    Ex: It is remarkable how, in an economy with diminishing job opportunities, librarians compensate for their inability to demonstrate the value of their skills by seeking the protection of educational and certification requirements.
    Ex: News of boundless timber reserves spread, and before long lumberjacks from the thinning hardwood forests of New England swarmed into the uncharted area with no other possessions than their axes and brawn and the clothing they wore.
    Ex: With the fading significance of these physical forms, some of the rationale for unit entries has disappeared.
    Ex: This article discusses the impact of growing number of students and waning financial resources on library services and acquisition focusing on book shortages, security problems and inadequacy of staffing.
    Ex: The public library is a complex institution, evolving through many decades of human history and colliding today with the perplexing realities of change, declining funding, and shifting purpose.
    Ex: As well as cuts imposed by the Government, libraries were faced with inflation in the price of books and periodicals, and a falling rate of exchange between the pound and the dollar.
    Ex: Many challenges lie ahead for those selling children's books with increased competition and shrinking profit margins.
    Ex: Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex: It has not yet been decided what strategies libraries will use to face the crisis of rising personnel costs and sinking funds for book acquisitions.
    Ex: Every publisher, materials vendor, systems vendor and bibliographic utility that serve libraries face sharp competition for a share of the ebbing library market.
    Ex: The second reason is that companies have to take care of costs to meet the descending price rate of the market.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cada vez menor

  • 17 cada vez más alto

    (adj.) = constantly rising, steadily rising, steadily growing
    Ex. Recently there has been more than the usual talk about the exceptionally-high and constantly-rising costs of scholarly journals and what scholar, editors, and libraries can do about the situation.
    Ex. Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex. The strategy is to maintain a steadily growing base line which can expand in better times.
    * * *
    (adj.) = constantly rising, steadily rising, steadily growing

    Ex: Recently there has been more than the usual talk about the exceptionally-high and constantly-rising costs of scholarly journals and what scholar, editors, and libraries can do about the situation.

    Ex: Poland is currently enjoying a steadily rising national income, declining inflation, receding unemployment and an educational boom.
    Ex: The strategy is to maintain a steadily growing base line which can expand in better times.

    Spanish-English dictionary > cada vez más alto

  • 18 desembolso nacional bruto

    • gross national debt
    • gross national expenditure
    • gross national income

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > desembolso nacional bruto

  • 19 gasto nacional bruto

    • gnawed part
    • GNE
    • gneiss
    • gross national debt
    • gross national expenditure
    • gross national income

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > gasto nacional bruto

  • 20 gastos nacionales brutos

    • gross national debt
    • gross national expenditure
    • gross national income

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > gastos nacionales brutos

См. также в других словарях:

  • national income — ➔ income * * * national income UK US noun [U] ECONOMICS ► the income earned by a country from the goods and services it produces: percentage/share/proportion of national income »Workers share of national income is very low. an… …   Financial and business terms

  • national income — n. the total income earned by a nation s productive factors, including all profits, rents, wages, etc., during a specified period, usually a year; net national product minus indirect business taxes …   English World dictionary

  • national income —    According to the Statistical Office of the European Community, Spain s GDP in 1992 was 444,000m ecus and GDP per capita was 11,354 ecus (for the UK 805,600m ecus and 13,926 ecus respectively). Spain s net national income per capita was 10,014… …   Encyclopedia of contemporary Spanish culture

  • National Income Life Insurance Company — Type Subsidiary of Torchmark Corporation Industry Life insurance Founded 2000 Headquarters …   Wikipedia

  • National Income and Product Accounts — The National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) are part of the national accounts of the United States. They are produced by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the Department of Commerce. They are one of the main sources of data on general… …   Wikipedia

  • national income accounting — Set of principles and methods used to measure a country s income and production. There are two ways of measuring national economic activity: the expenditure approach, which measures the money value of the total output of goods and services in a… …   Universalium

  • National income policy agreement (Finland) — Finnish national income policy agreements or comprehensive income policy agreements (Finnish: tulopoliittinen kokonaisratkaisu, often called tupo; Swedish: inkomstpolitiskt helhetsavtal) are tripartite agreements between Finnish trade unions,… …   Wikipedia

  • National Income Accounting — A term used in economics to refer to the bookkeeping system that a national government uses to measure the level of the country s economic activity in a given time period. National income accounting records the level of activity in accounts such… …   Investment dictionary

  • national income — noun Date: 1878 the aggregate of earnings from a nation s current production including compensation of employees, interest, rental income, and profits of business after taxes …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • national income — the total net earnings from the production of goods and services in a country over a period of time, usually one year, and consisting essentially of wages, salaries, rent, profits, and interest. Cf. gross national product, net national product.… …   Universalium

  • national income — total amount of income earned by the residents of a country in a specified amount of time …   English contemporary dictionary

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