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592 Sentences With "charge more"

How to use charge more in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "charge more" and check conjugation/comparative form for "charge more". Mastering all the usages of "charge more" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This means that some charge more than others for access.
"Peter keeps telling me to charge more," says Mr Sammallahti.
Checkpoints have become more stringent, prompting smugglers to charge more.
Ford will also charge more for its new hybrid models.
He has to charge more just to stay in business.
"'French' meant you could charge more money," Ms. Saltzman said.
"When we slow down, Uber can charge more," he said.
"It's not a discount if you charge more," Roth said.
They can choose to charge more, but it's relatively rare.
"Banks can't charge more on existing credit lines because borrowers will ask for contractual pricing, but if they ask for new money, I do expect the banks to charge more," the second senior banker said.
A more obvious solution would be to charge more for permits.
And here's the galling part — they charge more and don't outperform!
That may be a good reason for providers to charge more.
Three of those 11 states charge more than twice the amount.
"I charge more for a Long Island Iced Tea," he says.
America's sheltered airlines charge more than European peers and deliver worse service.
They could charge more to small groups of clients for better access.
Utilities say they have to charge more because wholesale costs are rising.
The question of whether it should or could charge more is complicated.
These cards typically charge more interest than plastic that doesn't offer rewards.
Yet outside commodity markets, most firms can charge more than marginal cost.
One way to do that is to charge more money for ads.
That's part of the reason why I didn't want to charge more.
A premium podcast can charge more than $100 for every 1,000 listeners.
"I think that you charge more here because you can," she said.
Once a regulated apartment is empty, a landlord can charge more rent.
She was indicted on the murder charge more than two months later.
Brian Young, a Justice Department prosecutor, said authorities may charge more individuals.
So organizations have to charge more to cover higher staffing and equipment costs.
I imagine Trapholizay is different, though, where you're leading the charge more aggressively.
Wave did charge more than banks for transfers, says its boss, Brad Jones.
And that will, of course, make them charge more when they are lending.
The clearance spaces have also helped the chain charge more on older merchandise.
JIM CRAMER: --Elizabeth Warren says you charge more than anybody else on that.
First and foremost MoviePass has learned that it needs to charge more money.
This implies that insurers can charge more for people with pre-existing conditions.
Health care is expensive because companies have to charge more to maintain revenue.
If the tax passes, then you will have to charge more for widgets.
Analysts expect the companies to charge more than $1 million for these therapies.
They benefit from the ratings uptick because they can charge more for advertising.
To the extent that firms with pricing power charge more, it will hurt consumers.
Just remember never to charge more than you can afford in the first place.
Lenders charge more money to higher risk customers than those with better credit rating.
But airlines sometimes charge more per ticket if you book seats for multiple passengers.
"A higher limit doesn't mean you should charge more on your card," Malani says.
She later clarified and emphasized that they would not charge more for recovered rockets.
Hell, even if I did it for a living I'd charge more than $4.
Currently, most hospitals charge insurers around double the Medicare price, but some charge more.
So do you think carriers will stay in the market but just charge more?
The one-on-one sessions are more explicit, and you charge more per minute.
They also vary by time: many restaurants charge more for dinner than for lunch.
To maintain growth, Apple has employed a shrewd strategy: Charge more for the devices.
Loosening rules on internet providers would let big companies charge more for their services.
It can also get you a credit card on which to charge more things.
Plus, Facebook has proven its ability to charge more for ads in the past.
Real growth rather than financial engineering will be the new game as lenders charge more.
And it's illegal for insurers to deny coverage -- or charge more -- for pre-existing conditions.
Brandless considers those ideals built into the price rather than a means to charge more.
Other firms charge more and require a speaker to spend days in a sound studio.
That leaves providers free to restrict access and charge more for whatever services they want.
As a result, insurers will lose money and either charge more, drop out, or both.
Companies like Billie, a woman-oriented shaving company, do not charge more for feminine items.
With wedding spending so high, Yonatan wondered why Snap doesn't charge more for the feature.
When rates go up, banks do better since they can charge more to lend money.
Insurance rule changes, like allowing health plans to charge more to older customers, are unlikely.
Virgin earlier priced seats on its space plane at $250,000, but may now charge more.
Your experienced barber is entitled to charge more than a newbie straight out of school.
The bill could have allowed insurers in certain states to charge more for such coverage.
Eventually, Shuldman expects restaurants to charge more for delivery, passing the costs on to consumers.
Because it's available when avocados are in short supply in Florida, the Carla can charge more.
RavPower's USB-C wall adapter is fast, small, and can charge more than just your iPhone.
It would help to charge more for roadside parking, nudging drivers to use underground car parks.
But if a few firms become powerful enough, they can see off competitors and charge more.
Internet-service providers might choose not to charge more for using broadly popular services like Netflix.
Higher advertising value means that content sellers (like the NFL) can charge more for their games.
Plus, some providers simply charge more for a service because they can get away with it.
"I think we actually charge more than Jira, so it isn't the price point," he said.
Investors saw the possibility that the company's American arm could charge more for what it makes.
Again, if you simply charge more on it, you'll end up in a worse financial position.
Moreover, many universities charge more for STEM degrees because the fields are more expensive to teach.
People kept telling the Morenos that they needed to charge more, and last week they listened.
Gaining a reputation for being creative is also a way for ad groups to charge more.
Could publishers charge more for certain games, arguing it's the cost of eliminating other revenue streams?
"Very large Crude carriers (VLCC) and Suezmax tankers can charge more for longer trade routes," explained Sand.
These tend to be more specialized and allow the company to charge more, making them more profitable.
What that amounts to, basically, is that insurers could charge more for people with certain health conditions.
Before the ACA, employer plans could not deny coverage or charge more because of pre-existing conditions.
YouTube also plans to soon unveil a premium service to charge more for its original video shows.
I used to think that the superfood label was simply an excuse to charge more for something.
For example, AT&T's prediction that it can charge more for advertising after the merger isn't guaranteed.
Some hotels charge more than $215,220 for a sand sculpture, depending on design, detail, complexity and size.
Or they might want to charge more for parking so as to indirectly provide a revenue source.
Why lock in today's market rates if you will be able to charge more in the future?
Broadly speaking, there are only two options — charge user fees, like tolls, or charge more in taxes.
New York clubs have also taken advantage of the comedy boom to charge more for stand-up.
In turn, they would charge more for their services, which would discourage retirees from seeking investment advice.
WE WERE CRITICIZED— QUICK: BY THE WAY, DO YOU CHARGE MORE IN FEES AS RESULT OR NO?
And that becomes my truth unless I diversify my friends, which I charge more white people to do.
Over time, as that service adds new features such as DVR, you can charge more and make money.
The new Model S and Model X cars will be able to charge more quickly from Tesla's Superchargers.
"I could charge more, but my thinking is that I know how much the military makes," he said.
Technics definitely has the brand loyalty to be able to charge more than $699 for the new decks.
Her firm can charge more for delivering electronics, allowing it to defray the cost of moving heavier products.
"The brand equity of big banks still allows them to charge more," says Daniel Webber of FXC Intelligence.
That means that startups looking to go public can likely charge more for their equity, increasing their valuation.
His tendency to watch particular shows has even allowed MSNBC and Fox News to charge more for advertising.
By making some Stories ads unskippable, Facebook's apps could charge more while making them more impactful for advertisers.
Hotels and restaurants charge more in winter too, but the strong Swiss franc has priced many people out.
If treatment charges are rising, it tells you that smelters can charge more because there is ample supply.
Banks can benefit from an interest-rate increase because it allows them to charge more for their loans.
And once Party City gets its helium back, its new supplier will charge more than its last provider.
For example, because streaming video takes up more bandwidth than reading text-based sites, companies could charge more.
Such contracts allow physicians to opt out of Medicare's strictures and charge more than the amounts normally allowed.
The idea is to prevent harassment by owners seeking to force renters out in order to charge more.
For example, when banks reordered bank debits to charge more overdraft fees, consumers sued and recovered $1 billion.
If you're targeting more wealthier people with something that's a huge convenience to them, you can charge more.
If parents switched jobs, their new insurers could not impose waiting periods or charge more for sick newborns.
Klein also got DC to charge more for on-street parking, again nudging people away from owning private cars.
Privately-operated baby hotels often charge more than government-approved childcare centers, and can be staffed by unqualified personnel.
For instance, they might charge more to view high-resolution "4K" video, while offering lower-quality video for free.
And most carriers charge more for 5G in their plans, too, or only include 5G in their pricier plans.
When the Fed is raising interest rates, banks can charge more for loans and increase their net interest margin.
Given that Facebook can often charge more for a video advertisement, the focus on the medium is understandably huge.
They would likely try to deny coverage or charge more for people who are more likely to get sick.
Yet so far, wireless carriers are making it very clear they're hoping to charge more than ever for 5G.
More than 2401 top-tier private colleges now charge more than $2529,0003 a year, including Columbia, Duke and Stanford.
"Postal service should be allowed to charge more for packages, review following Trump spat with Amazon finds," CNBC reported.
But it would charge more for "commercial services," including advertising mail and most anything you might order on Amazon.
Carriers could charge more for blocking data collection, though the F.C.C. said it would monitor "pay for privacy" offers.
They could also again charge more based on gender or line of work, or raise rates on older Americans.
Grain dealers at rivers typically charge more than their inland counterparts because they are more dependent on export markets.
He figures he could charge more for the extra cargo that gets packed inside but he chooses not to.
While Minnesota offers a variable rate with a maximum of 5 percent, other states charge more, according to Steffen.
All exhibitions are free, unlike some biennales that charge more than $30 for entry fees to each exhibition space.
It lets insurers charge more to older Americans and gives them absurdly little to help them cover their costs.
Remember, he was the guy who advocated for waivers that would allow states to charge more for preexisting conditions.
In Standard mode I got 20 miles of range on a single chargemore on Eco mode, less on Turbo.
Allowing insurers to charge more -- 130% of a plan's premium for a year -- to those who let their insurance lapse.
With shrinking windows for whitewater rafting, Basalla thinks that companies will have to charge more for it in the future.
The bundle model serves the company, which can claim it's offering bigger and better services, and charge more for it.
If you need to charge more than one USB-C device at a time, the SuperHub is an ideal option.
The BCRA, unlike the House bill, would never let insurers charge more to people who already have a health condition.
Eventually, WarnerMedia wants to charge more for that service than it does for HBO, which generally costs $93 a month.
But Libras should allow Facebook to charge more for online ads, by making purchases of advertised products quicker and simpler.
Drug companies often charge more in the U.S. to offset the cost of offering discounts in countries with different laws.
A repeal could allow internet providers to block or slow down content, or charge more for content like streaming video.
But opponents to the bill worry that the lesser charge may encourage prosecutors to charge more teens with the crime.
Some people believe that sustainable fashion is more expensive because labels use it as a marketing ploy to charge more.
Investors are underestimating Netflix's ability to charge more for its video streaming service, according to a top Wall Street firm.
But if you see funds that charge more than you want to pay, consider replacing them with lower-cost alternatives.
And crossovers allow automakers to charge more money for a car that does not cost that much more to make.
Primephonic costs $8 a month and Idagio $10 a month; both services charge more to stream music in high resolution.
While extreme rates like $2,500 per semester are rare, there are many colleges that charge more than $1,000 a year.
Though I imagine if this catches on, carriers will use it as a way to charge more for certain seats.
But the national and international attention on the case likely made the charge more significant for the defendant, he said.
But Brown said the fact that it's harder to move between banks makes it easier for them to charge more.
And it steadfastly ignored how human beings actually use technology, because doing so meant companies could charge more for it.
AT&T says it supports net neutrality — but it's staying quiet on whether it could charge more for faster access.
The $20 fee would be sent to the state, but retailers would be allowed to charge more on top of that.
Left unanswered is the question of whether providers will be able to charge more for customers who don't share certain information.
For several decades, certain cancer centers have been allowed by the U.S. government to charge more for the care they give.
Electric companies like Pacific Gas & Electric, often charge more during daytime, summer hours due to the demand on the power grid.
This zappy student-schlepper gets 120 miles on one chargemore than enough to get your kid to school and back.
This is achieved by quickly charging at a high temperature and then storing the charge more slowly at a cooler temperature.
Origination fees: Some lenders charge up to 8% in origination fees, while others charge more modest fees, or none at all.
This surge protector includes three outlets and two USB ports so you can charge more of your USB devices at once.
Spotify says the policies forces the company to charge more in its premium subscriptions when they sell it in the application.
Santander Brasil was unable to take advantage of the highest borrowing costs in a decade to charge more for new loans.
Typically, higher rates let banks charge more interest on loans, while forcing them to grow what they pay out on deposits.
At the same time, strong demand may give companies the pricing power they need to charge more and cover their costs.
If we were willing to pay a higher price for the service, Uber would gladly charge more and pay drivers more.
As part of the law, phone companies will not be allowed to charge more for either of these anti-robocall services.
Critics say it's encouraged hospitals to charge more for care, which patients eventually pay for in the form of higher premiums.
The bill, however, would allow insurers to charge more for people who have been without coverage for more than 63 days.
Side-by-side, a closed source software company will generally be able to charge more per unit than an open-source company.
GM said it was able to charge more for cars during the quarter and the declines came from less its profitable segments.
Today, with the American shale oil industry whirring again, Halliburton is at max capacity for many services and itching to charge more.
This USB-C adapter transforms it into one powerful brick, adding four more ports so you can charge more devices at once.
That power controller is also integral to systems like Qualcomm's quick charging, which regulates voltage in tiny increments to charge more efficiently.
Farmers cannot charge more for their produce; because of the competition among supermarkets, prices have changed little in the past 20 years.
The Statnett CEO said Britain and Germany, which both charge more for power than Norway, would see lower and more stable prices.
I easily get over ten hours of battery life on a chargemore than double what I had on the Osmo Mobile.
The company is able to charge more under those contracts as demand rises for the metal, a critical battery component, Brondeau said.
She also said that the ranch charged $50,000 for West to hold the event and she lamented that she didn't charge more.
London introduced a congestion charge more than 10 years ago while Paris has taken steps to pedestrianise some of its central roads.
Human smugglers are going to charge more, so it becomes more and more expensive for the people who are trying to cross.
Federal statutes now mean that medical insurers generally can't charge more for a "pre-existing condition" or take genetic information into account.
The Agriculture Ministry said the government opted to charge more in the financing due to the need of balancing the federal budget.
Mr. Trump's economic plans could also benefit the firm if interest rates rise and banks are able to charge more for loans.
Consolidations are one of the driving forces behind the towering profits, because monopoly hospitals are known to charge more than nonmonopoly hospitals.
Their belief that costs will not increase could eventually slow actual price gains by making it hard for businesses to charge more.
You can typically visit the same studio as many times as you like, though ClassPass may charge more for repeated return visits.
After proving it could charge more for new iPhones, the company has quietly increased the price to buy into the newest models.
Net neutrality is the concept that Internet providers can't discriminate between, or charge more for, more intensive types of content, such as streaming.
For years, Apple's iPhone business appeared to defy gravity as the company managed to sell more devices and gradually charge more for them.
Insurers still have to cover people with preexisting conditions, although they can charge more to people who have a break in insurance coverage.
The items will also be the same price, regardless of size, despite the common tendency for stores to charge more for bigger clothing.
The sector typically rises with talk of higher rates, on the expectation that banks' income could rise as they charge more for loans.
Some have been known to charge more for drugs in Europe for example, so they can sell them under cost price in Africa.
But regulator Ofgem, which reviews the cap each six months, said it had to let utilities charge more due to rising wholesale prices.
Western Union's large territory allows them to continue to charge more in many markets, while digitally they have become more competitive on pricing.
When the Federal Reserve raises rates, as it did four times last year, banks pocket more money as they charge more for loans.
Hospital systems continue to merge with each other and gobble up doctors' practices, which lets them charge more for the care they provide.
Your iPhone will charge more slowly if it's powered on and performing tasks while it's also trying to send current to the battery.
That would enable AT&T and others to charge more for certain types of content, so long as they are open about it.
To boost revenues, refiners are increasingly making money out of products such as coins and jewelry parts for which they can charge more.
To boost revenues, refiners are increasingly making money out of products such as coins and jewellery parts for which they can charge more.
Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi wrote last week that Apple's bet to charge more for the iPhone will pay off in a big way.
Nowhere is the charge more evident than the push to keep jobs at the Indianapolis plant of the heating-and-cooling manufacturer Carrier.
Net interest income rose 2 percent to $2.4 billion, helped partly by higher interest rates, which allow banks to charge more on loans.
Looking ahead, big banks are expected to benefit this year from rising interest rates, which allow them to charge more money for loans.
We don't have to charge a fortune, but we can charge more than we charge now and get a much better water outcome.
Many jails charge more, but even $5, at regular intervals, can be a burden to families of incarcerated people, who are often poor.
Many state parks cost $2 to $85033 per visit, charge more to reserve a campsite or other facility, and offer discounts for locals.
In other words, your device will charge more slowly on a wireless pad than it will if you just plug it in directly.
Under such contracts, doctors can, in effect, opt out of Medicare and charge more than the amounts normally allowed by the program's rules.
In New Orleans, the Southern Poverty Law Center has complained to state regulators that bondsmen routinely charge more than is allowed by law.
ESPN is already seeing larger audiences when it adds its mobile and digital consumers, which means they can charge more for ad rates.
With less regulation, big internet providers will be able to charge more for their services, extract new fees from websites and block content.
An Instagram influencer with a larger following, or more engagement, can charge more to advertisers who want pay them to promote their products.
So the one collaborative solution is to say, let's charge more for something that's actually good for people or aligned with people's interests.
Because we're going to charge more for those things, and now you're going to count those things, and those things are called money!
Hospitals that see a lot of uninsured and Medicaid patients might charge more to patients with private insurance to make up for possible losses.
The legislation included a provision that under certain conditions would have undone Obamacare's ban on letting insurers charge more for people with those conditions.
It costs us the same to make them, so we didn't go down the route of should we charge more for this or that.
Would the ability to offer skimpy plans, and charge more for complete ones, price even more than 24 million people out of sufficient insurance?
They charge more than in-store prices, but since it keeps me from impulse shopping, I've saved quite a bit in the long run.
The House bill allows states to decide whether insurers can charge more to people with pre-existing conditions and roll back Obamacare's Medicaid expansion.
Finding: - Many active funds offer a similar exposure to that found in passive funds but charge more for it, so-called "closet index" funds.
With the best and brightest academics scrambling to be published in those journals, publishers are able to charge more for access to their research.
It would allow states to charge more for preexisting conditions Under Obamacare, insurers can't legally charge people higher premiums because they have preexisting conditions.
Similarly, only 26 percent want the states to decide whether insurance companies could charge more, or refuse to cover, those with pre-existing conditions.
They tend to charge more to ride ferries than buses or trains, and their ferry fares are based on the length of the trip.
Banks climbed after Wednesday's release of the Fed minutes on the expectation they will be able to charge more for loans as rates rise.
"Shockingly, Apple claims to lose money on repairs, which is startling because they charge more than third parties, who turn a profit," Proctor said.
Protracted low price growth hurts the economy as companies struggle to charge more for goods and services, salaries stagnate and investors get low returns.
They are able to charge more money on lending when interest rates are higher, so the Fed's low-rate policy has hurt the sector.
If worker productivity is rising as measured by what's made each hour, ordinarily wages should rise because they can charge more for their labor.
Plus, it says right in his bill that states could charge more for pre-existing conditions, so this appears to be yet another lie.
Second, recreational stores pay for stuff like licenses, testing, marketing, rent and utilities, and they need to charge more to make up for that.
He knows neighbors who charge more for their parking spots, but he sees it as a way to build his relationship with good tenants.
It is unjust to charge more for staples like food so that discretionary plastic items can be offered free, especially when there are alternatives.
Google's latest move lets the company sell ads and services that are more closely tied to actual transactions, which they can charge more for.
On-street spaces are reoccupied just moments after the last motorist pulled out, and garages charge more than many people earn in an hour.
Even though she has nearly 50 times more followers on Pinterest than Instagram, Coffman is able to charge more for Instagram posts and Stories.
For example, luxury or fashion influencers generally charge more than yoga or health and wellness influencers, considering they have the same number of followers.
The 2013 model lasted around 13 hours on a single charge, more than enough to keep you working all day in a coffee shop.
Active managers typically charge more, with the goal of trying to beat the index, although they do not always live up to the promise.
Therefore, insurance companies at this time cannot deny coverage or charge more money to cover kids sick with anything from terminal cancer to asthma.
The city said if riders do not charge more than the federal reimbursement rate per mile—54 cents—the rules do not apply to them.
Closing auctions have become a big revenue driver for the established exchanges, which charge more to trade in their closing auctions than during the day.
These bills — often called "balance bills" — happen when out-of-network providers charge more than insurers pay and patients are responsible for paying the balance.
The idea is to build up verticals and then create partnerships that will let the company charge more for ads across its network of applications.
That act alone might be forcing some app developers to charge more than they might on a platform that doesn't demand a revenue share cut.
Instead, government policies foster an environment that makes it easier to introduce new medications at a high price and to charge more for existing drugs.
Allowing the two carriers to combine would substantially reduce competition, allowing the new company to charge more, which would lead to higher prices for consumers.
They charge more for higher-speed connections, even enabling customers to rent computers within the exchange, allowing them to shave milliseconds off their execution time.
The Fed's string of rate hikes enabled banks to almost immediately charge more for loans, while deposit costs rose more gradually and with a lag.
The company clearly had no economic sensitivity whatsoever, and unlike virtually every other internet company, Facebook can charge more for mobile ads than desktop ones.
If AT&T wants to withhold "must have" programming from a rival telecom company, or charge more for it, that company cannot readily replace it.
Though some CCRCs will let you transition into long-term care without an increase in your monthly fee, others charge more as your needs increase.
Even though she has far fewer followers on Instagram than Pinterest, Coffman is able to charge more per post on the Facebook-owned social app.
The key elements for this crime are simple and straightforward, which is why criminal defense counsels fear this charge more than most in an indictment.
They start charging more for subscriptions, which drives more people away, which makes them have to charge more for subscriptions, which drives more people away.
But responding to concerns, the White House said participating employers could not exclude any workers from the plan, or charge more to those in poor health.
The move allows Uber to charge more for slightly better vehicles and higher-rated drivers that used to be lumped in with its budget UberX tier.
As the Obama administration reported last spring, U.S. business concentration has increased markedly since the late 1990s – which typically enables monopolies and oligopolies to charge more.
Cable and telecom giants like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast were are no longer legally allowed to charge more for preferred access to startups and consumers.
As the subsidy has been withdrawn, Indian exporters have to charge more for overseas sales, said Ajit Shah, president of the Mumbai-based Onion Exporters' Association.
"Piracy on Android is a much bigger issue on the platform especially in the case of premium iOS titles that charge more than $0.99," Holowaty explains.
As the subsidy has been withdrawn, Indian exporters have to charge more for overseas sales, said Ajit Shah, president of the Mumbai-based Onion Exporters' Association.
Sometimes prices are derived from perceived status: Wines from Napa Valley can charge more because Napa adds value not attributed to wines from, say, Lake County.
The lesson of all those stories about Rembrandts found at garage sales is that buyers have no obligation to inform sellers that they could charge more.
The EcoSport starts at around $20,000, but there are higher trim versions available, which allow Ford to charge more for the car at relatively little cost.
Net neutrality proponents, including many large internet companies, argue that allowing ISPs to prioritize internet traffic differently may drive ISPs to charge more for various activities.
"When there are more women in charge, more women are hired, said Felicia D. Henderson, a longtime writer-producer whose credits include "The Punisher" and "Empire.
A study conducted by Yale found that hospitals where Envision's Emcare unit operated appeared to charge more out-of-network bills for at least one insurer.
That would allow the company to charge more for ads because users are more engaged, without having to increase the number of ads on the platform.
When banks were sued for reordering bank debits to charge more overdraft fees, or for manipulating foreign currency conversion fees, many banks changed their practices accordingly.
That means insurers who participate are free to deny people coverage or charge more based on a customer's medical history, a practice that's illegal under ObamaCare.
This lady came highly recommended, and she seems both great and like she could charge more, but maybe I still have New York prices in my brain.
If games with "good graphics" can charge more, should we say all VR is expensive because it's visually immersive, or cheap because the art is often simpler?
The pants were selling faster than Costco could stock them, and when he bought another shipment for $22.99 per pair, it was ultra-tempting to charge more.
In a Mobile World Live report, an analyst from CCS Insight sounded a little disappointed that the carriers couldn't charge more for a faster service than 270G.
The potential absence of further interest rates increases by the Fed means that banks may not be able to charge more on loans in the coming months.
The company has been selling its snacks and beverages in smaller packaging, allowing it to charge more per ounce while appealing to customers who want smaller portions.
They sold them in bulk to credit card companies, who in turn used them to lure new customers and encourage cardholders to charge more on their cards.
Companies can't refuse to offer coverage to people with preexisting conditions, but they can charge more for it and add exclusions that make the policy largely worthless.
By gaining market share, they say, hospitals are able to charge more for their care and gain more influence about where patients are sent for lucrative services.
"Normally I charge more than 1.500 usd but I can charge you only 1.200 usd, cause its [sic] a lot of work and takes time," Pelaez writes.
The measure actually loosens Obamacare's regulations as it relates to pre-existing conditions, namely states could allow insurers to charge more based on a person's medical history.
Indeed, BPD's own supervisors at Central Booking and prosecutors in the State's Attorney's Office declined to charge more than 11,000 arrests made by BPD officers since 333.
Anthony Bourdain: I think it's part of the effect of the discovery by corporations that if they call something artisanal they get to charge more for it.
" Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg posted on her account that "internet providers shouldn't be able to decide what people can see online or charge more for certain websites.
They could also again charge more based on gender or line of work, as was legal before the Affordable Care Act, or raise rates for older people.
One fact that often startles the newly engaged is that vendors will charge more for a wedding than for other events, like corporate parties or family gatherings.
The rules had leveled the playing field for consumers by mandating that internet providers couldn't slow down load speeds or charge more for certain types of content.
They're built in to their cable distribution deals, that HBO has to be $15 a month, so do you charge more by adding other stuff in there?
I have my studio, Caro has her training, anywhere else I could charge more but we'd also both be working two other jobs just to get by.
In Uganda, President Yoweri Museveni is still in charge more than 30 years after he came to power promising to replace his predecessor's brutal dictatorship with democracy.
In Michigan, Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, has brought charges against seven priests in her statewide investigation, and she has promised to arrest and charge more.
Pharmacies will often give you a generic version of the drug but charge more for a specific brand, which in turn, may cause a variety of side effects.
Consumers could also see ISPs start to "bundle" services — such as certain websites or applications — and charge more depending on what a person wants access to, experts said.
The big picture: Referrals are the lifeblood of hospital systems' businesses, and keeping patients in house allows hospitals to charge more and prevents rivals from getting their revenue.
Your iPhone's battery will charge more efficiently if it has a chance to cycle — to go from 100 percent to completely dead about once a month or so.
Most lease agreements require you to list everybody living in the unit on the lease, and that it's possible the landlord will charge more per person, he said.
That could be a different story in places with weaker local economies, where businesses are operating on thinner margins and don't have as much room to charge more.
Under Obamacare, insurance companies were forbidden from using preexisting conditions as an excuse to charge more money or deny coverage to the most vulnerable members of our society.
The new launch is likely to add to the pressure on active fund managers and brokers, which typically charge more but historically claim a better stock market performance.
Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories..But despite increased concern over the rising cost of a college education, schools continue to charge more and more for a degree.
It could mean that hospitals that charge more could feel pressure to lower their prices, while hospitals with lower prices could stand to benefit from the proposed rule. 
Plus, in the "Final Two" Dan examines President Trump's quote about how impeachment would affect your wallet, and United Airlines' decision to charge more for some economy seats.
Update: The Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday announced plans to dismantle net neutrality regulations, clearing the way for companies to charge more and block access to some websites.
Since children with disabilities are often judged as incapable of growing into self-sufficient adults, they would be considered a public charge more often than their nondisabled peers.
But when Mr. Watters agreed to develop an actual stand-up act that would allow him to charge more for performances, Mr. Nolen started booking gigs for him.
Competing software companies will charge more depending on how complicated your tax situation is; with FreeTaxUSA, federal returns are free regardless of how advanced your needs may be.
The system of rent caps, which forbids landlords to charge more than 10 percent above the district average for a new rental contract, has many exceptions and loopholes.
An engineer has already pleaded guilty, and prosecutors are preparing to charge more high-level German-based executives in the case, a person familiar with the matter has said.
But Apple says that Qualcomm has been able to charge more for these patents than it should have because the company is also the dominant supplier of smartphone modems.
In theory, you should be able to take more classes for less money, but now Lanman says studios will also have the option to charge more for their classes.
Google's YouTube said it will launch a new music streaming service, YouTube Music, next week and unveil soon a premium service that will charge more for its original shows.
In return carmakers can charge more and rake in fatter profits than their mass-market counterparts (margins average around 10% compared with 5% or below in the mass market).
" The SEIA's report states that the amount of electricity generated by Apple's solar facilities is enough to "fully charge more than 39 million iPhones every day for a year.
Private for-hire limos and sedans were required by law to wait an hour before picking up passengers and had to charge more than seventy dollars for the ride.
States could apply for waivers to allow insurers to offer policies with skimpier benefits and to charge more to those with medical issues if they let their coverage lapse.
Facebook could use that data to charge more for advertising and targeted services, although it also would have to forgo ads based on message content in Messenger and Instagram.
Under the House bill passed last month, insurers in states that waived community rating could charge more to those with pre-existing conditions if they let their coverage lapse.
Lufthansa, although on a lower margin, is hoping to charge more for first class passengers to manage extra costs, and says it is also on the prowl for acquisitions.
Brace for sticker shock, because for Facebook to offset the ad revenue of these rich hardcore users, it might have to charge more like $11 to $14 per month.
A lot of the reason that health insurance is so expensive in the United States is that doctors and hospitals charge more here than their counterparts in other countries.
Apple's tendency to charge more for iPhones outside the United States has "led to slowing demand" in markets such as India, said Neil Shah, an analyst at Counterpoint Research.
Insurers would be allowed to charge more to anyone — whether they are healthy or have a pre-existing medical condition — who had a gap in their health insurance coverage.
They've been consolidating at a fever pitch for decades now and thus taking more advantage of their right to charge more for the same medical practices non-hospitals perform.
Even "Fast Charge" wireless chargers, which charge more rapidly than standard wireless chargers, will take significantly longer to charge your device than a high-amperage charger like the iPad's.
The regulators argue that CHI wanted to wield its newfound clout by shifting some operations and imaging from less expensive outpatient settings to hospitals where they could charge more.
Pai's plan for doing so, which involves undoing Obama-era net neutrality regulations, would allow internet providers to give preferred status to some services and charge more for others.
Prosecutors said he used his royal persona to charge more than $28,000 in purchases at Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus to the account of an actual Saudi royal.
But because planes are flying near capacity, airlines can charge more for available seats, driving up the closely-watched metric of revenues per available seat mile, or unit revenues.
Some stores are just going to charge more for women's fashions than men's, and there isn't much you can do about that other than complain when you see it happen.
The thinking is that as the RBI raises interest rates, the country's lenders could also charge more interest on the money it lends to India's borrowers, such as home-buyers.
In states that waived rules and allowed insurers to charge more, some people with pre-existing conditions would lose coverage because they could not afford the premiums, the CBO said.
The company had already started mass producing its charging pads, which it says will offer 10 watts of output charge, more than the 7.5 watts mentioned by the new reports.
Import restrictions of refined sugar makes it possible to buy cheaper unrefined sugar from Mexico — refine it here and charge more than the world market charges outside the United States.
There are those folks who work to figure how to charge more, and companies that work to figure how to charge less, and we are going to be the second.
The rules created under that law made it illegal for lenders to charge more than 36 percent for payday loans, vehicle title loans, installment loans and other forms of credit.
Higher demand allowed the smugglers to charge more to get to the U.S. last year, according to Guadalupe Correa-Cabrera, a professor at the University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley.
North America's largest truckload carrier said freight demand was stronger than normal in the quarter, allowing the carrier to charge more to carry cargo not already under longer-term contract.
But the change does open the door for ISPs to charge more to some big broadband users, say Netflix or YouTube, which could pass those increased costs to their subscribers.
While rate increases tend to boost profits as banks can charge more for loans, if the rise is too steep it could dampen demand for mortgages or home refinancing loans.
Many childcare facilities also either refuse to accept or charge more for infants—and if women are going back to work after six weeks, they're going to need infant care.
For example, if you are counting cars, you could miss the economic growth that occurs as manufacturers charge more for their cars when they add fancier engines or leather seats.
A subsequent recovery in equity prices has helped portfolio managers charge more for their services, although a recent stock market downturn might point to cooler price gains down the road.
"Amazon can leverage it and charge more because it's a great marketing opportunity for brands and sellers," said Julie Spear, a manager at Bobsled Marketing, which advises Amazon marketplace sellers.
For instance, these insurance plans are not bound by the rules governing pre-existing conditions, and can either charge more or totally disallow any type of individual from signing up.
Investigators are expecting to charge more than five others within four to six weeks, according to the official, who cautioned the investigation is ongoing and this is subject to change.
Investigators are expecting to charge more than five others within four to six weeks, according to the official, who cautioned the investigation is ongoing and this is subject to change.
It makes it tougher to control costs, as doctors and hospitals facing a cost-control squeeze in one pool might simply charge more to patients or insurers in the other.
Chief Executive Brian Duperreault, who took charge more than a year ago, has been trying to turn around the company and its commercial insurance business, including by sharpening underwriting practices.
But Mark Tepper of Strategic Wealth Partners believes declining oil prices prove a greater fundamental risk to the airlines because they need higher prices in order to charge more for seats.
While intense cold will make solid-state batteries charge more slowly, they at least have the potential to survive in space, whereas a typical lithium-ion battery would never make it.
The House bill allows states to decide if insurers can charge more to people with pre-existing conditions, roll back Obamacare's Medicaid expansion and repeal the penalty for not purchasing insurance.
Broadband companies have long argued that if they could charge more for some traffic, they would be able to offer the internet more cheaply to consumers who are less bandwidth-hungry.
In fact, Ruckel's seems like a great strategy: charge more on the App Store as a convenience fee to those too lazy to click around a little to find it cheaper.
On the conservative end were Freedom Caucus Republicans, who felt the AHCA didn't repeal enough of Obamacare, like the provision that doesn't allow insurers to charge more based on preexisting conditions.
But it will allow insurers to decide not to cover maternity care or birth control and charge more for sinners with pre-existing medical conditions that, pre-Obamacare, disproportionately affected women.
They could also waive rules requiring that insurers not charge more for pre-existing conditions and would have to set up controversial high-risk pools for those people to buy insurance.
The MacArthur-Meadows amendment altered the initial healthcare proposal that would have allowed all states to charge more for preexisting conditions to only allow states with federal waivers to do so.
Stephenson said the app will allow customers to use two streams per household, although he said AT&T does have the ability to charge more for additional streams, according to CNET.
Instead, companies are trying to spur the federal and state governments to allow them to charge more, in exchange for a power source that does not pollute and is very reliable.
For example, Taycan is the first car with a system voltage of 800 instead of the more common 400 volts, allowing the car to charge more efficiently, according to the automaker.
Google's YouTube said on Wednesday it will launch a new music streaming service, YouTube Music, next week and unveil soon a premium service that will charge more for its original shows.
Chief Executive Officer Brian Duperreault, who took charge more than a year ago, has been trying to turn around the company and its commercial insurance business, including by sharpening underwriting practices.
Shell led the charge, more than tripling profits in the second quarter from a year ago, boosted by its refining and chemicals business and a 16 percent rise in oil prices.
Mr. Cusick and his business partner have so far been reluctant to charge more for their bikes, which cost $200 to $600, over worries that customers would opt for cheaper products.
He's not bothered by the 20 percent to 25 percent commissions, he said, because the platforms gave him global marketing and the incentive and confidence to charge more for his tours.
That bill prohibits insurers from denying coverage to patients with pre-existing conditions, but it does permit states to obtain waivers that allow insurers to charge more based on health status.
While traditional Passover products are subject to price wars, "companies that come up with a new sauce or a condiment have no competition, so they can charge more," Mr. Lubinsky said.
This puts a serious strain on an EV's battery, reducing the overall range and increasing the need to charge more often to minimize the chance of being stranded by a dead battery.
But other states are likely to seek waivers that would let insurance companies charge more for some care, and charge older people much more than they charge younger people, the CBO said.
However, if you missed two months of payments and carried $53,000 for 10 months, the card would charge more than $950 in interest and fees, eating up your gains from the points.
This is a backdoor way for insurance companies to discriminate against people with pre-existing conditions and go back to the days when they could deny, drop, or charge more for coverage.
Exelon used the shutdown plan to prod Pennsylvania lawmakers to pass legislation allowing nuclear plants to charge more for their electricity, as recognition of the emissions-free, relatively stable power they produce.
In the vein of SBTRKT's early sets, and when Disclosure realized they could charge more to put (live) on the lineup, Mura Masa eschewed decks in favor of live instrumentation and vocals.
We've remained at the same price because we know that people assume it's a high price—if they understood what goes on behind the scenes, they might tell us to charge more.
While Mr. Cassidy's bill forbids insurers to deny coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, it does permit states to obtain waivers that allow insurers to charge more based on health status.
The latest generation of the Renault Zoe can travel 395 kilometers, or 245 miles, on a charge, more than double the range of the first generation, which went on sale in 2012.
The SFC spokesman said the new regime does not signal the SFC's intent to sanction managers, but two sources said it would inevitably make "managers in charge" more accountable for rule-breaches.
Epic CEO Tim Sweeney said the company has no need to charge more, and developers who use Epic's Unreal Engine tools to build their game can get an even lower royalty rate.
While Netflix, Amazon and Vudu charge more for 4K content, that upgrade includes H.D.R. Apple, on the other hand, doesn't charge extra for a 4K upgrade on its movie rentals at all.
While Netflix, Amazon and Vudu charge more for 4K content, that upgrade includes H.D.R. Apple, on the other hand, doesn't charge extra for a 4K upgrade on its movie rentals at all.
The Trump administration signed on to a long-shot lawsuit this week that would overturn the parts of the law that require insurers to cover preexisting conditions and not charge more for them.
"The standard practice in the industry for some time has been to charge more if you come under attack," Matthew Prince, the CEO of Cloudflare, told me on a phone call last week.
Banco do Brasil has more room than Itaú or Bradesco to charge more for loans, Caffarelli said, adding that a recovery in demand for credit is likely to gain traction early in 2017.
"It's this whole sharing economy that we're all very cognizant of," Iger said, referring to the efficient use of space to lower tenant costs while allowing landlords to charge more per square foot.
Total operating revenue rose 2.9% to $5.9 billion in the quarter, helped by its Rapid Rewards Loyalty program, optional boarding fees and the ability to charge more for seats given reduced sector capacity.
If newspapers want to charge more, now is the time to do it: According to the AP/API study, those who currently pay for a subscription tend to think it is relatively inexpensive.
Then, Kate Wagner at The Baffler: It is a Vessel for capital, for a real estate grift that can charge more for an already multi-million dollar apartment because it merely faces it.
Federal prosecutors are preparing to charge more parents in connection with the college admissions bribery scandal, broadening a probe that has already resulted in several guilty pleas, The New York Times reported Wednesday.
And although high prices do serve as incentive for innovation, other work by Mr. Garthwaite and colleagues suggests that under certain circumstances drug makers can charge more than the value of the innovation.
Of the 26 states that impose fees on electric vehicles, 11 charge more for an EV than an owner of a traditional gas-powered car ends up paying in gasoline taxes every year.
There isn't even that much of a partisan divide: An overwhelming majority of Republicans don't believe insurance companies should be allowed to deny coverage or charge more to those with pre-existing conditions.
Many pet insurance companies charge more for breeds prone to certain medical conditions, like cancers or heart disease; a large dog, like a Great Dane, will cost more to insure than a Chihuahua.
With two USB ports and a standard AC power outlet, this funky wall charger plugs into your wall outlet to deliver multiple connections, so you can charge more devices at the same time.
More than 177,000 people enroll in for-profit beauty schools across the United States each year, which on average charge more than $17,000 for tuition, fees and supplies to earn a cosmetology certificate.
"If I were president, I would be going after other countries for routinely ripping off our drug companies by jamming them with lower prices, which then causes them to charge more here," Cramer said.
Greenfield suspects Netflix is announcing a price increase two days before earnings because CEO Reed Hastings and other executives will want to discuss the motivation to charge more without distracting from the company's performance.
By way of illustrating how regulations hamper business growth, the star of CNBC's "Billion Dollar Buyer " points to the restaurants he owns in San Francisco, where he must charge more for the same dishes.
Total operating revenue rose 2.9 percent to $5.9 billion in the quarter, helped by its Rapid Rewards Loyalty program, optional boarding fees and the ability to charge more for seats given reduced sector capacity.
Under the amendment, states could opt out of provisions that require insurers to offer an array of benefits in all their policies and ban them from charge more based on a person's health background.
This way hotels could charge more if a lot of guests want to check in early on particular morning, or tempt guests to extend their checkout at a discounted rate on a slow weekday.
O) on Tuesday reported a bigger-than-expected increase in second-quarter profit, driven by strong air travel demand and the ability to charge more for seats after the grounding of Boeing Co's (BA.
The DOJ official said that the combined company "would have the incentive and ability to charge more for Time Warner's popular networks" and that it could keep others out of the streaming video market.
The BoE is seeking powers to limit the size of BTL mortgages in order to reduce risky lending while Britain's finance minister George Osborne has said he will charge more tax on BTL investments.
U.S. steelmaker stocks spiked on the expectation that they'll be able to charge more for their products, given that countries like China will have a tougher time flooding the U.S. market with subsidized steel.
A binding estimate means that they cannot charge more or less than the stated amount, unless the mover determines at the time of pickup that there are more items or services than originally estimated.
YouTube is getting ready to launch a new version of its music service — and at the same time it is getting ready to charge more to see original shows like a "Karate Kid" spinoff.
We are told that if we masturbate without having an orgasm for the next ten days, our bodies will be able to hold a greater electrical chargemore Shakti, the divine cosmic feminine energy.
But the co-host of FS1's "Undisputed" says Brady could charge more than DOUBLE that if he wanted to ... because it's not about what you ask ... it's about what people are willing to pay.
With the rise of Netflix and its ilk in streaming media, broadband companies began to suggest that they may have to charge more for some types of traffic, or slow down some services ("throttling" them).
Because of the judge's intervention and Cyprus' delay to help with evidence collection, prosecutors said the statute of limitations clock paused, allowing them to bring the charge more than five years after the alleged crime.
Collins has said that she fears Graham-Cassidy might also take away protections for people with pre-existing conditions if insurers in certain states are allowed to charge more based on a person's health history.
Murray argued that the mere threat Time Warner could black out its programming for a provider will allow it to charge more for its content, even if the likelihood of such a blackout is slim.
IF YOU WERE STAND ALONE AND HAD TO SELL YOURSELF DIRECTLY, YOU WOULDN'T HAVE THE PENETRATION YOU DO. YOU MIGHT BE ABLE TO CHARGE MORE TO A NICHE MARKET, BUT WOULD THAT BE AS VALUABLE?
TOKYO (Reuters) - Activity in Japan's services sector expanded at the fastest pace in 19 months in March as oustanding business improved, allowing companies to charge more for their goods, a private survey showed on Wednesday.
The new rules would give network providers like Comcast, AT&T and Verizon (which owns Oath, which owns TechCrunch), sweeping new power to throttle distribution of certain content… and conversely charge more for better access.
Producers don't need to spend anywhere near as much money as they would if they were raising free-range animals, and they can even charge more for the added value of the cage-free classification.
As of Monday, six months after the Federal Communications Commission dismantled regulations that the Obama administration enacted in 2015, internet providers can charge more for certain content or for giving preferential treatment to certain websites.
GM said its new all-electric vehicles will be capable of 400 miles or more, charge more than 100 miles in 3.33 minutes and accelerate 0 to 60 mph in as low as three seconds.
But if a parent switched plans after a baby's birth, the new insurer could refuse to cover the care for an ill infant for an initial period of time or charge more, Ms. Pollitz said.
The Trump administration has told the Universal Postal Union based in the Swiss capital Bern that it will quit unless the agency agrees to let countries charge more to deliver mail they receive from abroad.
Yet, if Samsung does charge more for its S9 solely on the fact that it wants higher margins on its flagship line to compete with Apple, it would be both an unwise and an expected move.
Former Education Secretary Bill Bennett noticed 32 years ago that all the easy-to-get student loan programs that began to multiply in America in the late 1970s were encouraging colleges to charge more for everything.
As VanMoof co-founder Ties Carlier sees it, for city commuters who need to charge more than once a week, the smaller X3983 with the flat-folding handlebar option is a better solution than removable batteries.
But it also shows that the unclear signals from the Trump administration about whether it will pay insurers' subsidies, and whether it will enforce the individual mandate, are already forcing insurers to charge more for coverage.
A year after Uber introduced "upfront pricing"—setting the price of a ride on the outset—it's now beginning to charge more for certain routes in an effort to juice up its earnings, as Bloomberg reported.
One person with knowledge of the situation at a big four grocer said they had protested against Unilever's demands, noting that some of the products they wanted to charge more for are actually made in Britain.
What to watch: The Justice Department said the combined company "would have the incentive and ability to charge more for Time Warner's popular networks" and that it could keep others out of the streaming video market.
" Bezos said, "There are two kinds of retailers: those folks who work to figure how to charge more, and companies that work to figure how to charge less, and we are going to be the second.
Earlier Friday morning, Perry formally asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to implement a regulation that would allow nuclear and coal plants to charge more money for their electricity, an attempt to stop plants from closing.
If you have an iPhone 20173 or an iPhone X as well as a wireless charger that supports 7.5W or more, your phone will now charge more quickly as Apple first limited wireless charging to 5W.
For instance, inspectors who have to travel for their jobs are allowed to charge more of their travel expenses to agency-level credit cards so they don't have to run up debt on their individual cards.
This definition has allowed Chilean courts to charge more 1,370 people suspected of being involved in government-sponsored crimes committed from the onset of the dictatorship in 1973, and to put 117 of them behind bars.
You shouldn&apost spend more than you normally would just to get this perk, but if your business would already charge more than $30,000 to a card in an account year, this is a nice bonus.
Woolworths has been cutting shelf prices to lure back shoppers from Coles and discounters like Germany's ALDI Inc since closing a loss-making hardware joint venture which had forced it to charge more to maintain margins.
But with competition from new long-range models from players like Tesla, Chevrolet, Hyundai, Kia and Mercedes, the Nissan Leaf Plus will now deliver 226 miles per charge, more than triple the range of the original version.
"If I were president, I would be going after other countries for routinely ripping off our drug companies by jamming them with lower prices, which then causes them to charge more here," the "Mad Money " host said.
With the fee war between major ETF providers both brutal, and seemingly endless, there is more reason than ever before not to disclose a planned expense ratio, even if the plan is to charge more than nothing.
According to Weitzer, while high-end escorts can make up to $10,000 per client, lower-level escorts may charge more like $200 for a sex act; at the lowest end, street workers may charge $20 or less.
And, as Carey argues, by establishing the principle of debt forgiveness for all debt, colleges may feel like they can even charge more for graduate school and students would be more likely to take on more debt.
Verizon stopped offering unlimited plans in 2011 largely due to concerns about network capacity and a desire to charge more to customers who were heavier users of data, said Dave Heger, senior equity analyst at Edward Jones.
Tom MacArthur granted states the right to do away with certain protections enshrined by the ACA that would, in essence, allow insurers to charge more for those with pre-existing conditions than they would for healthy people.
But, if you add in the knowledge that everybody that walks into your store, because of UBI, now has a wealth baseline of X+$10K, don't you think that shop owner would charge more for his products?
That said, with the focus now off Tesla's demand and the chimerical bankruptcy and back on the odds of profits, the company's path to a positive margin is straightforward: Build fewer cars and charge more for them.
The forecast for a decrease in cost over 2017 levels comes as EOG's peers grapple with rising prices from Halliburton Co and other oilfield service providers, who are eager to charge more as crude prices climb higher.
And no one has led that charge more than the Void, a Utah-based company that since 2016 has opened 16 locations in four countries (with another 14 countries in the works across the US and Europe).
Democrats have said they worry that Kavanaugh would move to strike down popular provisions, such as the requirement that insurers cover everyone regardless of medical history and do not charge more for people with certain health conditions.
This is meant to prevent people from buying policies only when they need care, which would lead insurers to charge more, or bar policies for individuals so that the very sick would not be their only customers.
Steve Bullock declared on Monday that any internet service provider with a state government contract cannot block or charge more for faster delivery of websites, two core aspects of net neutrality, to any customer in the state.
This could create an odd scenario where the plans that Congress is eligible for have to cover a wide array of benefits but can also deny coverage or charge more to those expected to have higher costs.
After it failed, an amendment was introduced that would allow states granted limited waivers to scrap certain essential health benefits (including mental health services, prescription drugs, and pregnancy, maternity, and newborn care) and charge more for preexisting conditions.
The short-term plans differ from ObamaCare plans in a major way: they allow insurers to charge more for people with pre-existing conditions, and don't have to cover certain services like mental health treatment or prescription drugs.
The technology allows power to pulse into the battery in specific modulations, increasing the speed at which the lithium ions in the battery travel from one side to the other and causing the battery to charge more quickly.
So if you made $50,000 a year, you contribute X. And what Clinton was saying is that universities cannot charge more than X. They can charge, just not what is more than affordable for anyone given their circumstances.
The ACP will be able to charge more for passage to bigger ships now that massive new locks have been built at both the Pacific and Atlantic ends of the canal and channels have been deepened and widened.
As in those markets, a surge in pricier developments in the Bronx has put pressure on existing rent-regulated tenants because landlords know that they can charge more for those apartments once units turn over to new renters.
With such a system in place, a new-use innovator could charge more for the patented new use, and it would be easier to tell when a competitor is breaking the law by selling its product for that use.
Burberry is in the middle of a repositioning as a "higher" luxury label, meaning it can charge more for its clothes and accessories, a move initiated by Chief Executive Marco Gobbetti after he took on the role in 2017.
Ohio-based Fifth Third Bank has been hit with a proposed class action in Orlando federal court accusing it of manipulating its customers' debit charges to deplete their checking accounts more quickly so it can charge more overdraft fees.
Because these updates are routine and free of charge, more players may be inclined to spend money on the base version of Overwatch many months after release knowing Blizzard won't be charging extra down the line for downloadable content.
"If the carriers are going to charge more for 25G, dramatically more value is going to have to be delivered in the form of better performance or new capabilities," said Kevin Crull, former chief strategy officer at Sprint. 285.
If you accept that more highly skilled funds are able to charge more, something I've not always found to be the case, then it is reasonable to expect that there is a rising relationship between fees, turnover and performance.
To accomplish the same goal, the House version of Obamacare allows insurers to charge more for policies after a coverage lapse, while the Senate bill imposes a six-month waiting period to buy a policy after a coverage gap.
Multiplex stocks were in focus after the Maharashtra government decided multiplexes in the state won't be allowed to charge more than the maximum retail price from August 1 and there will be no ban on food products from outside.
Branden Brown, who runs the farm with his wife, Rebekah, and her parents, Ken and Sue Poole, said they were losing money after several years of record low prices, and saw the chance to charge more for premium products.
What to expect from agency pricing and account staffingStartups should expect to spend at least $5,000 to $15,000 per month on a PR agency based in New York, although Langer said San Francisco-based agencies tend to charge more.
Ofgem, which reviews the price cap every six months, said it needed to allow suppliers to charge more as wholesale energy contracts, used to help formulate the cap level, were 17 percent higher than during the last cap period.
And now they are discussing a provision that would allow operators hosting EU tourists on their networks to charge more than the wholesale cap in exceptional circumstances if they are unable to recover their costs, several EU diplomats said.
"While many in the market lament that 'free' shipping will be dilutive to pricing, it does not seem to us that Amazon has any lack of confidence in its ability to charge more for shipping services," the analyst explained.
They asked participants at the seminars to ask for increases in their credit limits, telling them that it would help improve their credit score, without mentioning that it would also allow them to charge more expensive Trump University courses.
"If the CFPB rolls back this rule, it would put hard-working people in harm's way by allowing banks to charge more overdraft fees, all in the name of corporate greed," New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement.
Steven Maijoor, chair of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), said the review may help shed light on why some "active" funds that charge more for selecting stocks, perform less well than cheaper "passive" funds that track a benchmark.
It's known as the "pink tax," and it refers to the maddening fact that companies charge more for the "women's" version of a wide variety of products — from deodorant to dry cleaning to adult diapers — than similar products marketed to men.
Ofgem, which reviews the price cap every six months, had said then that it needed to allow suppliers to charge more as wholesale energy contracts, used to help formulate the cap level, were higher than during the last cap period.
If poultry producers make less money on dark-meat exports, they will charge more for white meat in Britain: the cost of breast meat could rise by as much as 27%, according to a study by ResPublica, a think-tank.
If it is used for commerce, not just peer-to-peer payments, Facebook could take part of the fee that now goes to card-issuers, and charge more for ads, since buying the products touted would be quicker and simpler.
They're still plastic, with a camera in the corner of the right lens, and they still charge more or less wirelessly via metal contacts on one hinge that line up with counterparts in their case, which doubles as a battery.
And in Massachusetts, where legalization opponents actually outnumber supporters, the pro-legalization side has raised over $300,000—but half of that figure is from a single donor, a man who faced a drug possession charge more than a decade ago.
Cinemas offer cut-price tickets in the middle of the day, airlines offer cheaper seats with less leg room and flying at ungodly hours—surely it cannot just have occurred to Disney to charge more when more people want to go?
Carl Shapiro, an economics professor at the University of California at Berkeley, said the planned $85.4 billion merger would give AT&T, which owns DirecTV, leverage to charge more for Time Warner's Turner family of channels, which includes sports and CNN.
Regional banks also had good earnings, largely due to the fact that in the current rising rate environment, they can charge more for loans that they make but do not have to increase by the same amount what they pay depositors.
The proposed Better Care Reconciliation Act has a few key differences from the House's AHCA: It wouldn't allow some insurers to charge more for preexisting conditions and would result in deeper cuts to Medicaid funding, but through a more gradual process.
When the effect of fresh food and energy are stripped away, nationwide consumer prices rose 0.3 percent in December from a year earlier, unchanged from November in a sign domestic demand remained too weak for firms to charge more from households.
In Hong Kong, laws stipulate recruiters cannot charge more than 313 percent of a helper's first month salary but a study by campaign group Rights Exposure showed in reality maids are often overcharged, sometimes 25 times the legally permitted amount.
Advocates of net neutrality argue that without such regulation, which requires ISPs to treat all internet traffic as equal, ISPs like AT&T, Comcast and Verizon could charge more for various activities, such as video streaming, which takes up more bandwidth.
To help their profits, airlines fit more passengers into smaller spaces, charge more for once-basic services like legroom, inveigle customers into joining frequent-flier programs, and lavish ever more perks on higher-revenue passengers at the front of the plane.
He must also post fares in the two taxis he operates, cannot charge more than 10 times the Plattsburgh maximum fare, $7.50, and must call the attorney general's office each time he picks up a passenger headed for Roxham Road.
The Super Bowl often gets the highest ratings of any TV broadcast in the US.A 30-second ad in this year&aposs Super Bowl will cost up to $5.6 million; last year, most programs didn&apost charge more than $200,000.
Analysts said there are three possibilities for Broadcom to resolve Qualcomm's licensing issues: sell or spin off the licensing unit, shift to a model that charges a flat fee, and simply charge more for chips, using the patents as leverage.
One 2009 study paid for by NAR found that commission rates do tend to vary with housing prices, which would suggest that Realtors relax their fees on very expensive homes, and charge more in down markets when homes are harder to sell.
It might be more difficult in practice to ban gender pricing in products than it is for services, Whelan said, because there are so many different factors involved — including packaging and marketing differences — that are legitimate reasons for companies to charge more.
The system is likely to reduce financial incentives for hospitals to charge more for expensive procedures such as C-sections as they will no longer be able to make separate claims for each doctor's visit, treatment or test provided during and after pregnancy.
In particular, the two campus food stores had an array of healthy options (including low-fat milk and produce) and did not generally charge more for them than for less-healthy versions of the same items (with baked chips being the exception).
After decades of an "I'll ask my wife" or "just make it pink and charge more" mentality when it comes to women's products, along with decades of resistance to calls for inclusion —  existing institutions lack the internal resources and knowledge necessary to adapt.
Companies like Comcast, Charter and Verizon are updating their pricing structures to charge more for faster internet speeds to make up for lost cable subscribers, pointed out Greg Portell, lead partner in A.T. Kearney's consumer products and retail and communications, media & technology practices.
With fewer planes flying in a strong domestic air travel market, airlines have been able to charge more for seats, leading to stronger rises in unit revenues, based on per available seat mile, for American and Southwest as well as its main rivals.
Fortunately, there are battery start-ups trying to build better batteries, ones with lower costs, improved energy densities and better performance for supercharged industrial products and consumer technology, as well as electric vehicles, which would charge more quickly and travel longer distances.
HONG KONG (Reuters) - A former senior Hong Kong official and a billionaire property tycoon arrived in court on Tuesday to appeal against a corruption charge more than two years after they were jailed in one of the city's most high profile corruption cases.
Some pensioners will lose benefits under the plans to fund social care, the newspaper said, adding that May will pledge to remove winter fuel payments from the wealthy and to charge more people who currently receive free care in their own home.
Google and Amazon use this system to bring up their utilization levels by offering access to these VMs for cheap when demand is low, but as demand picks up, they rotate them back into their regular pool, where they can charge more.
Volvo's decision to sell its trucks with a bundle of services enables it to derive greater revenue in the potentially lucrative autonomous truck market than if it were to sell its trucks alone, as it can likely charge more for its added services.
Roughly 6.4 million people between the ages of 19 and 29 would lose their health coverage, the study says, largely due to less subsidies, putting an end to Medicaid expansion, and allowing insurers in some states to charge more for preexisting conditions.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bank stocks were the standout winners on Wednesday from the Federal Reserve's unexpectedly firm signal that its next rate hike could be just weeks away, a prospect that could boost banks' bottom lines as they charge more for loans.
The Trump administration is backing a lawsuit brought by Texas and other Republican-led states challenging the requirements that insurers offer coverage to everyone regardless of their medical history and do not charge more to people who have had certain health conditions.
Standard baggage fees for domestic flights have remained steady for several years now at $25 (Spirit and Frontier charge more), but airlines pick up the slack with their charges for overweight bags, which have crept up over the years, Mr. Hobica said.
Singapore Airlines has a reputation for quality and a substantial amount of business travel to and from the city-state, improving its ability to configure aircraft with a high number of premium seats and charge more than one-stop competitors, according to analysts.
You can't be kicked off it, but if states are left to decide what essential health benefits they'll cover and if they'll charge more for people with preexisting conditions— both of which the Graham-Cassidy bill allowed—your premiums could go way up.
However, revenue and profit growth could still be a good indicator as to how well the overall iPhone business is doing as Apple tries new strategies to charge more for each device and layer paid digital services on top of each gadget it sells.
Shoup recommends that cities apply something like Uber's infamous surge pricing to parking: If a block tends to be full of parked cars at a particular time of day, the city should charge more, and if the demand is lower, it should charge less.
Truckers can charge more for "white glove" services - which include varying degrees of installation, product assembly, and repairs - but the margins are often no better than other types of deliveries because stiff competition for new business has held down the prices carriers can charge retailers.
These vehicles include a lot of optional service extras that GM would normally charge more for on top of the price of a new vehicle or lease, however, including Apple CarPlay and Android Auto infotainment options, as well as SiriusXM satellite radio, 4G LTE WiFi.
The former assistant to Vogue Creative Director Grace Coddington decided it would be a good and safe and without-consequence idea to charge more than $50,000 in expenses on Coddington's credit card, and sell thousands of dollars worth of Coddington's stuff on the website TheRealReal.
The financial value of the Rams, who were ranked 28th of 32 N.F.L. teams last year, will jump by moving to the Los Angeles area, where Kroenke can charge more for tickets, sponsorships, stadium naming rights, media deals and a host of other things.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A judge for the Securities and Exchange Commission opened the door for U.S. exchanges to charge more for their high-speed data products, a move that could reduce the number of high-frequency trading firms that trade large quantities of securities.
As the number of developers and applications grow within ecosystems, users like you and I derive great value from those networks — making the likelihood that we'll leave ever smaller — meaning that, over time, Apple and Google can charge more of us to use their systems.
That balance depends on the price of the gasoline leaving the refineries — for example, if a refinery has an unplanned outage like the one that took place in the Midwest last August, but consumer demand remains high, refineries can charge more for their product.
Jimmy Kimmel recently made a poignant and important argument about the effects of the Republican healthcare bill on his show by discussing his newborn son's heart condition, and the human cost of allowing health insurance companies to charge more to those with preexisting conditions.
Silicon Valley investor Marc Andreessen offered some rare insight to start-up founders in a Q&A blog post Thursday, including why his firm requires a warm introduction to a founder before investing, and why enterprise start-ups need to charge more for their products.
Paul Weiss, where partners charge more than $1,4003 an hour and clients include the National Football League and Citigroup, is looking for these parents, pro bono, as part of a federal American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit against the Trump administration over its family separation policy.
That big companies bother to spend more money to make some of their products certified organic, fair trade, and more — there would be no market for this stuff without Rainforest Alliance, and no mechanism to charge more money for these products without their certification program.
But the more I talked with him, the more I felt a creeping unease both at how the supposedly gamey elements of Project Hospital mirror elements of the real U.S. healthcare system, particularly in the structural incentives to do more, charge more, bill more.
Thus, networks have a two-pronged reason for outing Netflix's viewership numbers — if they're huge, the competing networks can charge more for Netflix to license their programs; if they're small, the competing networks can insist Netflix isn't as omnipresent as it seems to be.
On Twitter's site, from what we understand, the company is now moving to charge more of the third parties that rely on Twitter data for their own enerprise services, as they look to build up and firm up a more diversified set of revenue streams around data.
The federal government is able to provide subsidies to buy health coverage for low- and middle-income Americans, as well as implementing certain standards for insurers, like making sure insurance plans cover basic benefits and not allowing them to charge more to money to sick people.
Photo: Mark Smirniotis USB battery packs may seem interchangeable, but after we researched 160 models, bought 50 pounds of batteries, then tested 17 packs in a dedicated battery laboratory, we found that the best ones charge more devices, more often, in the most convenient sizes and shapes.
FEWER SEATS, HIGHER REVENUES With fewer planes flying in a strong domestic air travel market, airlines have been able to charge more for seats, leading to stronger rises in unit revenues, based on per available seat mile, for American and Southwest as well as its main rivals.
The launcher will be able to carry between 40 and 90 pounds of cargo "We intend to offer inexpensive pricing for satellites who don't mind riding along without a clear orbit or schedule but charge more for last minute 'drive up reservations' and different orbits," said Cantrell.
Carl Shapiro, an economics professor at the University of California at Berkeley, said the planned $85.4 billion merger would give AT&T, which owns satellite and streaming television provider DirecTV, leverage to charge more for Time Warner's Turner family of channels, which includes sports content and CNN.
Raising that target to 3 or even 4 percent as some economists have suggested would shift the outlook of firms in particular, allowing them to charge more for goods and pay more for labor without the fear that a central bank would step on the brakes.
On the afternoon I handed over my son to them, the lawyers were strangers to me, except for several phone calls exchanged and a description from a lawyer friend of my then wife, my son's mother, recommending the one in charge more than highly, without reservation.
With its rooms mainly sleeping four people, Generator's revenue per available room is higher than some economy hotel rivals, while the eye-catching buildings and social events mean it can charge more, said Korallus, a Swede who used to work for Radisson hotels-owner Carlson Rezidor.
Of course, companies rated best for tech support often charge more for their products or they may charge a subscription fee for enhanced customer care so the cost of helping you is baked in, as with Apple's customer support service, AppleCare, and the Amazon Prime subscription service.
It is hard to determine exactly how the fees are being applied: The commissions system is opaque, with the prison itself collecting a portion of the companies' revenues, leading the companies to charge more service fees to an inmate's phone account to make up the difference.
The agency is now looking into whether Signature lent money to real estate developers — including the Kushner family's business, Kushner Companies — knowing they planned to use abusive tactics to push out low-rent tenants and then charge more, according to two people familiar with the review.
But as streaming becomes, increasingly, one of the best ways for those studios to wring money out of their projects (money that previously would have come from TV syndication deals or DVD sales), studios are able to charge more and more for even their less prized items.
Her best advice to fellow freelancers is to let your network know about your business, produce quality work, charge more, and have "the confidence to approach your dream clients and work with larger companies with budgets that can afford to pay you what you're worth," she said. 
Theater owners themselves, who initially balked at the expense of digital projection, finally came around when it became clear that digital projection could add to their bottom lines, reducing labor costs by cutting out pricey skilled projectionists and allowing theaters to charge more for digital 3D movies like Avatar.
EST: Vice President Pence and Karen PenceKaren Sue PencePence to make swing through New Hampshire on eve of primary The Hill's 2900:220006 Report: Democrats gear up for crucial New Hampshire debate The Hill's 2202:2628 Report: Democrats turn to obstruction charge MORE host a lunch for governors.
Low-volume providers typically charge more per hour and have a two- to four-hour minimum for dates; they either subsist off that income (the highest rate I've seen is $2,000 an hour) or have income from a day job that they supplement with sex work for fun.
Maryland's enabling legislation caps administrative costs at 50 basis points; all-in costs will be "less than 50 basis points, but we will need to charge more initially to pay back startup loans from the state," said Joshua Gotbaum, chair of the Maryland Small Business Retirement Security Board.
The waivers that would allow certain states to opt out of essential health benefits and charge more for preexisting conditions would make premiums in those areas rise, and people with preexisting conditions wouldn't be able to buy insurance comparable to plans under the current law, if at all.
At the AMES Companies Inc factory here, the wheelbarrows coming off the assembly line once every six seconds cost the company more to make in the United States than abroad, but U.S. retailers generally will not charge more for them because consumers would balk, AMES President Mark Traylor said.
In its complaint, the Justice Department said consumers would most likely face higher prices for cable or satellite television subscriptions because AT&T would be able to charge more for licensing of valuable programming like the N.C.A.A. men's basketball tournament, which is broadcast in large part on Turner networks.
While prices are cooling at the high end of the market in many big cities, the low- and middle-income housing markets in Nevada, Texas, California, Florida and Colorado are so hot, local officials say, that landlords routinely reject subsidized tenants because they can charge more to other renters.
And, as the company has mentioned before, the social network is running out of places to show ads in News Feed, which means Facebook either needs to charge more for those ads, find new places to put them, or sign up more users in order to keep growing.
"If you see a bunch of funds that are charging more than 1 percent a year, that is a red flag," said Christine Benz, director of personal finance at the investment research firm Morningstar, referring to investments that charge more than 1 percent of your total money invested.
While other improv centers like Second City and the Groundlings, which loom large in Chicago and Los Angeles, charge more for tickets, Upright Citizens Brigade is built on a different financial model, one that seems to promise to save money by not paying performers and charging consumers less.
"I think that if the consumer is willing to pay more for a certain color, then it's in manufacturers' and marketers' best interest to charge more," said Christine Whelan, a professor of consumer science at the University of Wisconsin Madison and director of the university's MORE (Money, Relationships, and Equality) program.
The huge share of the digital advertising market controlled by Google and Facebook also means they can charge more for those ads than they could in a more competitive market—costs that may be passed on to consumers with higher prices for the goods they buy online, the reports say.
The proposal would give states the chance to apply for waivers that could gut several core Obamacare insurance reforms that protect consumers with pre-existing conditions, including requiring insurers are required to cover certain benefits and remove the ban on allowing carriers to charge more based on a person's health history.
They make more money when they can charge more interest on payments, and the government has been inflating the cost of education by giving away money to institutions that then funnel those funds into facilities and athletics departments that in turn require higher tuition costs to maintain their upkeep, Javice says.
Initially, she attempted to go the traditional route and sent the book to six publishers, each of whom rejected it because Potter was insistent that the book be small enough for a child to hold while the publishers wanted something bigger (so that they could charge more money for it).
"By doing something with a more premium feel, it could allow Nissan to charge more for its service and potentially relieve some of that profitability pressure they could face if they were to try to race to the bottom in terms of pricing," said Jeremy Carlson, automotive analyst at IHS Markit.
There had been speculation before now that this iPhone would be at least $1,000: for one, Apple would need to charge more than $769, the price of the Plus-sized iPhone; and two, there's been some assumption that Apple will want to depress sales a bit so that it can better manage supply.
Tom MacArthur and Freedom Caucus Chairman Mark Meadows, would allow states to seek waivers to weaken several key Obamacare insurance reforms that protect those with pre-existing conditions, including the benefits insurers must cover in their policies and the ban on allowing carriers to charge more based on a person's health background.
I LOVE THE WAY YOU DO THINGS INSURANCE IS SUCH A GREAT BUSINESS BECAUSE A LOT OF TIMES YOU CAN FIGURE OUT WHAT'S LIKELY TO HAPPEN AND CHARGE MORE THAN YOU REALLY NEED BECAUSE THE THINGS THAT PEOPLE WORRY ABOUT PROBABLY ARENT GOING TO HAPPEN SO IT IS JUST LIKE PRINTING MONEY.
But now we've somehow come to a place where corporate taxes are not only an accepted policy, but we actually hear from politicians and economists who argue no country should have the sovereign right to charge its own corporate tax rate … because that wouldn't be "fair" to the other countries who want to charge more.
Earlier Cassidy had spoken about the bill needing to meet the Jimmy Kimmel test, harkening back to that viral monologue where the late night comedian revealed his son's heart condition and called out Republicans for considering a new bill that would allow insurance companies to drop coverage or charge more for pre-existing conditions.
While that increase will be more many customers would like, Halliburton said it needs to charge more if it its to provide the services needed fuel the industry's nascent recovery, "Pricing momentum continues to move in a positive manner," Jeff Miller, who will become the company's chief executive next month, said in an interview.
Similarly, even if you think that inflation is fundamentally a monetary phenomenon (which you shouldn't, as I'll explain in a minute), wage- and price-setters don't care about money demand; they care about their own ability or lack thereof to charge more, which has to – has to – involve the amount of slack in the economy.
Recently, large insurers withdrew from the healthcare marketplaces and did so politically to get what they wanted out of Congress — the House passage of the American Health Care Act (AHCA) with provisions to: exclude Americans with health conditions that cost more to cover; charge more based on preexisting conditions; and offer lower quality of care.
It's possible that oilfield services companies will bring in equipment from other areas where oil output remains depressed, but the Permian will likely experience at least a mild bottleneck, said Pearce Hammond, co-head of exploration and production at investment banking firm Simmons & Co. Service providers can then charge more, which will cut into drillers' profits.
RELATED: The race for votes on health care is on, once again The amendment would allow states to seek waivers to weaken several key Obamacare insurance reforms that protect those with pre-existing conditions, including the benefits insurers must cover in their policies and the ban on allowing carriers to charge more based on a person's health background.
For those states that let insurers charge more based on a person's health status, sick people would "ultimately be unable to purchase comprehensive nongroup health insurance at premiums comparable to those under current law, if they could purchase it at all—despite the additional funding that would be available under H.R. 1628 to help reduce premiums," CBO said.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE has tried to pass repeal plans that would take people's health care away and allow insurance companies to charge more for pre-existing conditions.
Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas) and bestselling author Marianne WilliamsonMarianne WilliamsonKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline New poll shows Biden falling badly, three-way tie for Democratic lead Marianne Williamson on Trump: We have a little bit of a 'mad King George' in charge MORE — garnered support form more than 2202 percent of respondents in the poll.
This term also gets overused, and has taken on different meanings, but it means that an Internet service provider (ISP) has to treat all traffic moving across its network the same – that it can't arbitrarily decide, on its own, to block, to throttle, or to charge more for prioritizing the content that you want to see.
Requiring health insurance companies to provide coverage to people with pre-existing health issues is one of the most popular provisions of Obamacare, and Republicans are eager to claim that their replacement bill will continue to provide coverage to people with pre-existing conditions, even if it allows insurers to charge more or not cover them at all.
Of particular interest are Signature's credit lines to the Kushners: The agency is now looking into whether Signature lent money to real estate developers — including the Kushner family's business, Kushner Companies — knowing they planned to use abusive tactics to push out low-rent tenants and then charge more, according to two people familiar with the review.
After buying Martin's Beach, Mr. Khosla was told by the county that he had to either (a) keep open a road that the public used to get to the beach, and not charge more than the 1972-era rate of $2 a car for parking, or (b) apply for a Coastal Development Permit to change access.
While giving consumers choice could help drive down cost in theory, the state attorney general's office said it had received a steady stream of complaints from customers who say they have been scammed by companies offering discounted rates up front only to later charge more than what the consumers would have paid through their utility company.
On some level, this cycle simply reflects the ongoing theme of what could be called "phase two" of the streaming revolution; as studios and networks realize just how much more valuable their catalog titles are to streaming services, they can charge more for them, which means Netflix, Hulu, and Amazon have to be more selective about what to invest in.
Republican Study Committee Chairman Mark Walker said the focus when talks resumed would be on sticking points such as whether to allow states to opt out of Obamacare mandates that insurers must cover a minimum tier of services and cannot charge more to those with pre-existing conditions - a popular provision of the law that Trump has promised to protect.
At least 60% of those who initially say they support the Texas judge's ruling turn against it once they hear that it would mean insurers could charge more or deny coverage to those with pre-existing conditions and that young adults would no longer be able to stay on their parents' insurance, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll in January.
"Republicans even enable insurers to once again charge more or deny coverage to millions of Americans with pre-existing conditions, abandoning those families who lapse in coverage for any reason at all," she said House Energy and Commerce Committee Ranking Member Frank Pallone, Jr., a New Jersey Democrat, and Ways and Means Committee Ranking Member Richard Neal of Massachusetts said they could would not support the plan.
Catch up quick: A task force created by Trump said the U.S. Postal Service should charge more to ship some packages; after a fan uproar, Netflix renewed "Friends" for a hefty price; marketers are risking free advertising to target smart speaker owners; the ACLU outed facial recognition plans from the Secret Service; and Canada revealed a series of fraud charges against a Huawei executive.
Newt Gingrich is using his ties to President-elect Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE to charge more for his public speaking engagements, according to a new report.
While the specifics around potential legislation remain fuzzy — as well as its odds of passing — the current version being pushed by the GOP calls for a 20 percent tax on products coming into the U.S. Given that the majority of apparel, footwear and consumer electronics sold in the U.S. are manufactured abroad, retailers have frequently, and vociferously, asserted that such a tax would wipe out their profits and force them to charge more.
Elect all of the Democratic candidates CNN to host live 7-hour climate change town hall with 2020 Democrats Poll: Biden supporters warm to Warren as an alternative MORE and author Marianne WilliamsonMarianne WilliamsonKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline New poll shows Biden falling badly, three-way tie for Democratic lead Marianne Williamson on Trump: We have a little bit of a 'mad King George' in charge MORE have also reached the individual donor requirement but don't yet have a single qualifying poll.
Interior Secretary Ryan ZinkeRyan Keith ZinkeNew policy at Interior's in-house watchdog clamps down on interactions with press Overnight Energy: EPA proposes scrapping limits on coal plant waste | Appointee overseeing federal lands once advocated selling them | EPA lifts Obama-era block on controversial mine Latest appointee overseeing federal public lands once advocated to sell them MORE defended his plan to increase the entrance fees for national parks, saying they need to charge more because too many people get in for free, including military members and the disabled.
And it's been clear with life insurance over the past few months, as there have been several reports that people who vape might have more difficulty obtaining these policies, because major reinsurers—those companies that insure the insurers—have been worried following the spate of illnesses in the U.S. The bigger question, of course—and one that applies to the cigarette surcharge too—is how we want to treat people, and if companies should truly be allowed to charge more for health insurance based on risky behavior they partake in outside the office.
White House hopeful and author Marianne WilliamsonMarianne WilliamsonKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline New poll shows Biden falling badly, three-way tie for Democratic lead Marianne Williamson on Trump: We have a little bit of a 'mad King George' in charge MORE likened President TrumpDonald John TrumpOur justice system must reward success Former Biden economic adviser: 'I really like a lot of' Warren's tax proposals Roy Moore calls for Omar to go back from 'whence she came' MORE to King George, the monarch from whom the U.S. declared independence, and hammered his trade policies as responsible for market instability.
Michael BennetMichael Farrand BennetKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline Sanders doubles down on 'Medicare For All' defense: 'We have not changed one word' Democratic candidates face hard choices as 2020 field winnows MORE (D-Colo.); New York City Mayor Bill de BlasioBill de BlasioKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline New York City panel recommends ending gifted programs for students CNN town hall with de Blasio, Bullock marks ratings low for network MORE; author Marianne WilliamsonMarianne WilliamsonKey questions in final hours before Democratic debate deadline New poll shows Biden falling badly, three-way tie for Democratic lead Marianne Williamson on Trump: We have a little bit of a 'mad King George' in charge MORE; Miramar, Fla.

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