Costing
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | 1974 |
Authors | Colin Drury |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2967468 |
About Costing
This is a text for introductory courses on cost and management accounting. It concentrates on the typical syllabus of a first year BA management accounting course, leaving out the more advanced topics covered in Management and Cost Accounting. . . .
‘I paid £30k to protect my child from her paedophile dad'
... " As well as the emotional impact of bringing the case, it has also come at a significant price - Costing more than £30,000...
Teach primary pupils real world maths - Labour
... An found that nine million working-age adults in England had low basic literacy or numeracy skills - Costing the economy £25bn a year...
Bibby Stockholm: Migrants could be back in weeks, says minister
... It previously said there were about 51,000 asylum seekers currently in hotels across the UK - having gone up by 3,000 since the end of March - Costing the taxpayer about £6m a day...
Chris Mason: Sunak gives striking prominence to migration challenge
... The next challenge is accommodation for asylum seekers - Costing the taxpayer £7m a day...
Chris Mason: Rishi Sunak's view from the Summit? Trouble back home
... So there are the theatrical moments, such as Rishi Sunak wearing the red socks - Costing £8 we were told - of the Hiroshima Toyo Carp baseball team, whose fans include the host of the summit, the Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida...
Lip fillers: Call for tighter regulation after botched treatments
... The 22-year-old from Acle in Norfolk needed three corrective procedures - Costing a total of more than £700 - to get them back to normal...
Child Trust Funds: Millions of pounds stuck in 80,000 accounts - report
... Michele says it was so complicated she had to go through the court process twice - Costing £371 in fees each time - to make sure both she and her husband could access her daughter s savings...
Afghan refugees to be moved out of hotels under new government plans
... He added that of the 24,500 people now living in the UK under the two resettlement schemes, about 8,000 remained in hotels, with about half of those being children - Costing £1m a day...
Bibby Stockholm: Migrants could be back in weeks, says minister
Asylum seekers could return to a migrant barge " within weeks" if safety tests show no cause for concern, the immigration minister has said.
The 39 men were briefly housed on the Bibby Stockholm, berthed in Portland Port, Dorset, before were found.
They were taken off and moved to a hotel while tests were being conducted on the vessel's water system.
Robert Jenrick said the removal of The Migrants had been " precautionary".
Responding to A Question in The Commons from Richard Drax , The Conservative MP for South Dorset, He Said : " It was very unfortunate that migrants had to be moved off the barge over the summer. We deeply regret that. We did take a very precautionary approach. "
The Minister said " definitive answers" to the subsequent tests were expected " very shortly".
He added: " Assuming that they show no signs of Legionella or indeed any other bacteria or cause for concern, then we will move people back on to The Boat as soon as possible, I think we can expect that within weeks. "
In an, some of The Men expressed " shock and fear" over The Discovery of Legionella and said they had faced " isolation and loneliness" since being moved off.
The Home Office said at The Time it was following all health protocols and advice.
The barge is a flagship part of the government's plan to cut the cost of housing asylum seekers and deter dangerous Channel crossings by migrants.
It previously said there were about 51,000 asylum seekers currently in hotels across the UK - having gone up by 3,000 since The End of March - Costing the taxpayer about £6m A Day .
The government intends to house about 500 men on the vessel while they await the outcome of their asylum applications.
The 222-room, three-storey barge, chartered by the government for 18 Months , arrived at The Port In July .
It was previously used to accommodate homeless people and asylum seekers in Germany and the Netherlands.
The Home Office previously said " using vessels as alternative accommodation, like our European neighbours are already doing, will be better value for British taxpayers and more manageable for communities than costly hotels".
However, Human Rights group Amnesty International compared the Bibby Stockholm to " prison hulks from the Victorian era" saying it was an " utterly shameful way to house people who've fled terror, conflict and persecution".
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com