Example sentences of "charged [prep] the public " in BNC.

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1 Employees who benefit from inhouse perks , such as concessionary travel facilities or free sports or entertainment tickets , will only have to pay tax on the marginal cost of concessions , rather than on the average cost charged to the public , following the House of Lords ' ruling in Pepper v Hart ( see also this issue , pp 22 and 85 ) .
2 Having withdrawn the original proposal to tax in-house benefits on the open market price charged to the public , the Financial Secretary gave assurance that in a number of specific cases benefits would continue to be taxed as before , and in the specific case of school teachers paying concessionary school fees , the charge would be nil or very small .
3 The employee earning more than £5,000 or the director will be assessed on the benefit received by him on the basis of the cost to the employer rather than the price that would generally be charged to the public .
4 The Bill as introduced sought by clause 54(4) to tax in-house benefits on a different basis from other benefits , i.e. , not on the cost of the in-house benefit to the employer but on the open market price charged to the public .
5 Take a railway running at a loss : the average cost of providing concessionary travel would be a sum greater than the fare charged to the public .
6 In the case of a heavily endowed school , the fees charged to the public may be less than sufficient to cover the total cost of running the school , the shortfall being made good by the endowment .
7 On the average cost basis , the taxpayer would be treated as receiving a benefit greater than the amount charged to the public .
8 The 1976 Finance Bill as introduced proposed to charge in-house benefits on a different basis from that applicable to external benefits , i.e. , on the open market price charged to the public : clause 54(4) .
9 The case concerned the tax liability of teachers employed at Malvern College , a fee-paying school , under a concessionary fees scheme which allowed members of the staff of the school to have their sons educated at the school at 20 per cent of the fees charged to the public .
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