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  2. Payroll tax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payroll_tax

    The expenses are for example training costs, work equipment and special work clothes, membership fees to certain organisations, etc. There is a tax relief for homeworking. Employees may receive up to EUR 3 per day spent exclusively working from home and there is an upper limit of EUR 300 per year.

  3. Labor burden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labor_burden

    Labor burden is the actual cost of a company to have an employee, in addition to wages that the employee earns. Labor burden costs include benefits that a company pays for employees that are included on their payroll, including payroll taxes, pension costs, workers compensation, health and dental insurance, and the cost of any other benefits that a company provides an employee.

  4. Educational technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Educational_technology

    Similar to an enterprise resource planning (ERP), it is a back office tool that aims at streamlining every aspect of the training process: planning (training plan and budget forecasting), logistics (scheduling and resource management), financials (cost tracking, profitability), reporting, and sales for-profit training providers. [143]

  5. The cost of training AI could soon become too much to bear - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/cost-training-ai-could-soon...

    Here’s Epoch AI’s projection of the hardware cost involved in training the most expensive AI models, through 2030. This excludes AI researchers’ salaries, which are considerable these days.

  6. Earned value management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earned_value_management

    According to the PMBOK (7th edition) by the Project Management Institute (PMI), Cost variance (CV) is a "The amount of budget deficit or surplus at a given point in time, expressed as the difference between the earned value and the actual cost." [19] Cost variance compares the estimated cost of a deliverable with the actual cost. [20]

  7. AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.

  8. Cost–benefit analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost–benefit_analysis

    Cost–benefit analysis (CBA), sometimes also called benefit–cost analysis, is a systematic approach to estimating the strengths and weaknesses of alternatives.It is used to determine options which provide the best approach to achieving benefits while preserving savings in, for example, transactions, activities, and functional business requirements. [1]

  9. Personal budget - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_budget

    In the most basic form of creating a personal budget the person needs to calculate their net income, track their spending over a set period of time, set goals based on the information previously gathered, make a plan to achieve these goals, and adjust their spending based on the plan. [3] There exist many methods of budgeting to help people do ...