Moms Working at Home Tips
oms working at home face the stress of taking care of their family as well as having to worry about bringing in a second income and generally work on a contractual or freelance basis.Women working at home are a new kind of business woman that do in fact have it all.
Moms Working from home is not just for women. There are many men who are working from home as well. (WAHM) is an acronym that stands for Work At Home Mom.
Mothers working at home work hard in order to bring the much-needed income in a home environment where they are able to take care of the home and ensure that they miss very little of their childrens growing up years.
Moms are the new wave that will make the change that our society needs. They no longer have to struggle to get a job or be rejected because they have children.
Tax Exempt Funding for Your Business?
Ever heard of tax exempt
bonds to fund private, for-profit businesses? Neither have I until this week.
Typically, when I hear about tax exempt bonds, I think municipal bonds issued by a city, school district, or some other government, not-for-profit agency below the state level. These organizations issue these bonds to raise money for certain projects in their area or region. These tax except issues allow these agencies to raise funds at lower interest rates. Their investors receive exceptions from Federal & State taxes. Win – Win for everyone.
So, can these same tax exempt bonds be used to fund, at lower interest rates, for-profit, private businesses? YES.
According to the Council of Development Finance Agencies, these Private Activity Bonds (PABs) are a mandate from the federal government which allows individual states to issue tax exempt bonds for the benefit of private entities within their state. In other words, each state is allowed a certain amount of private bonds it can issue to private companies or individuals under a tax exemption status – allowing these businesses a means to finance certain projects at lower interest rates than traditional financing. The amount of funds each state can raise is set by the federal government (call volume cap) and the “qualified” companies that can receive funds from these exempt bonds are set by Section 141 of the Internal Revenue Code.
