recurrent expenditures - translation to greek
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recurrent expenditures - translation to greek

SPENDING MADE BY THE GOVERNMENT OF A COUNTRY
Government expenditure; Government expenditures; Public expenditures

recurrent expenditures      
επαναλαμβανόμενες δαπάνες
επαναλαμβανόμενες δαπάνες      
recurrent expenditures
mouth ulcer         
  • Diagramatic representation of mucosal erosion (left), excoriation (center), and ulceration (right)
  • An [[aphthous ulcer]] on the [[labial mucosa]] (note [[erythematous]] "halo" surrounding lesion)
  • A small ulcer on the [[frenum]] on the lower inside lip
  • T4 N2 M0]], stage 4). Note rolled margins of central ulcer and surrounding areas of [[premalignant]] change. The patient died two months after subsequent partial [[glossectomy]] (removal of part of the tongue)
  • A "crop" of trauma-induced ulcers on the [[labial mucosa]]
ULCER THAT OCCURS ON THE MUCOUS MEMBRANE OF THE ORAL CAVITY
Mouth ulcers; Mouth sore; Cancer sore; Mouth sores; Oral ulcer; Recurrent aphthae; Recurrent (RAS) aphthous stomatitis; Minor aphthae (oral aphthosis); Herpetiform (oral aphthosis) aphthous ulcers; Major (oral aphthosis) aphthous ulcers; Singaw; Oral ulceration; Mucocutaneous ulcers; Mucocutaneous ulcer
άφθα

Definition

capital expenditure
n. payment by a business for basic assets such as property, fixtures, or machinery, but not for day-to-day operations such as payroll, inventory, maintenance and advertising. Capital expenditures supposedly increase the value of company assets and are usually intended to improve productivity.

Wikipedia

Public expenditure

Public expenditure is spending made by the government of a country on collective needs and wants of public goods and public services, such as pension, provisions, security, infrastructure, etc. Until the 19th century, public expenditure was limited as laissez faire philosophies believed that money left in private hands could bring better returns. In the 20th century, John Maynard Keynes argued that the role of public expenditure was pivotal in determining levels of income and distribution in the economy. Since then, government expenditures has shown an increasing trend. Sources of government revenue include taxes, and non-tax revenues.

In the 17th and the 18th centuries, public expenditure was considered a wastage of money. Thinkers believed government should stay with their traditional functions of spending on defense and maintaining law and order.

Examples of use of recurrent expenditures
1. President Vladimir Putin has promised to raise public wages by 50 per cent in real terms over the next three years, prompting criticism from the International Monetary Fund, which says÷ "Spending the oil wealth on wages, pensions and other recurrent expenditures before there is political resolve to push ahead with reforms will be a waste of an opportunity to accelerate Russia‘s economic modernisation.
2. David Craig, World Bank director for the West Bank and Gaza, said the money would enable the PA to "maintain economic and social stability in the short–term by covering urgent recurrent expenditures such as salaries of civil servants". "It remains a critical priority for the PA to undertake comprehensive reforms to bring down the deficit to sustainable levels," he said. ‘Side–stepping Hamas‘ Palestinians depend on more than $1bn (Ł0.58bn) in foreign aid a year.
3. Civil servants David Craig, World Bank director for the West Bank and Gaza, said the money will enable the authority to "maintain economic and social stability in the short term by covering urgent recurrent expenditures such as salaries of civil servants". "It remains a critical priority for the PA to undertake comprehensive reforms to bring down the deficit to sustainable levels." David Craig, World Bank director But Craig added: "It remains a critical priority for the PA to undertake comprehensive reforms to bring down the deficit to sustainable levels." Norway also announced on Tuesday it would provide $10 million to a joint aid package to pay the salaries of Palestinian Authority employees.