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The balance between the cost of incarceration and the reduction in crime due to the incapacitation effect remains difficult to make decisions on and problematic for politicians. [13] In 2015, a similar problem was noted in North Carolina, where a court-ordered reduction in student suspensions appears to be linked in an increase in on-campus crime.
The average cost of the incarceration of an individual in 2012 was approximately $31,286 per year with a range of $14,603 to $60,076. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] As of October 2015, the United States has the second highest incarceration rate in the world with 698 per 100,000 population. [ 7 ]
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In general, any medical attention, even though it may be expensive, is worth it, health is not negotiable. Image credits: evieinthebath #6. A good bra! Image credits: Embarrassed_Age7706.
It says McCartney also worked with a branding agency to create “additional branding services” for the retreat, at a cost of $100,710. Related line items included $5,000 worth of “visual ...
This 1 percent rule began in the late 1980s and early 1990s in a series of British and then European aviation cardiology workshops. The application of this "1 percent rule" has subsequently spread beyond the domain of aviation cardiology to all potential causes of medical incapacitation.
There were those jokes from older generations about how movie tickets used to cost a nickel or a quarter, but now we find ourselves joking about when those movie tickets used to cost $10.
A gap of 5% GDP represents $1 trillion, about $3,000 per person relative to the next most expensive country. In other words, the U.S. would have to cut healthcare costs by roughly one-third ($1 trillion or $3,000 per person on average) to be competitive with the next most expensive country.