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Costos De Contabilidad


Enviado por   •  22 de Abril de 2015  •  2.115 Palabras (9 Páginas)  •  154 Visitas

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Cobro de servicios

Pues no hay un tabulador, ciertamente. Por ejemplo hay REPECOS que ganan mucho pero el trámite es muy sencillo y con que les cobres 500 es suficiente, jeje, Por ejemplo tu servidora cobra de acuerdo a los Ingresos. Pero cuando es cuestión de poner un parámetro sin conocer los ingresos de las personas:

Repecos $500 si llevas nómina otros 500 por la nómina

Persona Física $1.000

Persona Moral entre 2.500 y 3.000

BRAZIL:

One of the world’s most captivating places, Brazil is South America’s giant, a dazzling country of powdery white-sand beaches, pristine rain forests and wild, rhythm-filled metropolises. Brazil’s attractions extend from enchanting, frozen-in-time colonial towns to dramatic landscapes of red-rock canyons, thundering waterfalls and idyllic tropical islands. Add to that, Brazil’s biodiversity: legendary in scope, its diverse ecosystems boast the greatest collection of plant and animal species found anywhere on earth.

Brazil offers big adventures for travellers with budgets large and small. There’s horseback riding in the Pantanal, kayaking flooded forests in the Amazon, ascending rocky cliff tops to breathtaking views, whale-watching off the coast, surfing stellar breaks off palm-fringed beaches and snorkelling crystal-clear rivers or coastal reefs – all part of the great Brazilian experience.

No less entrancing is the prospect of doing nothing, aside from sinking into warm sands and soaking up a glorious stretch of beach, caipirinha – Brazil’s national cocktail – in hand.

Brazil’s most famous celebration, Carnaval, storms though the country’s cities and towns with hip-shaking samba and frevo, dazzling costumes and carefree joie de vivre, but Brazilians hardly regulate their passion for revelry to a few weeks of the year. Wherever there’s music, that carefree lust for life tends to appear – whether dancing with Cariocas at Rio’s atmospheric samba clubs or following powerful drumbeats through the streets of Salvador. There’s the dancehall forró of the Northeast, twirling carimbó of the Amazon, scratch-skilled DJs of São Paulo and an endless variety of regional sounds that extends from the back-country sertanejo to reggae-loving Maranhão.

With so much going for them, it’s no wonder that Brazilians say ‘Deus e Brasileiro’ (God is Brazilian).

The population of Brazil, as recorded by the 2008 PNAD, was approximately 190 million (22.31 inhabitants per square kilometre or 57.8/sq mi), with a ratio of men to women of 0.95:1 and 83.75% of the population defined as urban.[277] The population is heavily concentrated in the Southeastern (79.8 million inhabitants) and Northeastern (53.5 million inhabitants) regions, while the two most extensive regions, the Center-West and the North, which together make up 64.12% of the Brazilian territory, have a total of only 29.1 million inhabitants.

Typical food in Brazil

The core ingredients of Brazilian cuisine with fish, seafood, beef, pork, chicken, tropical fruits, beans and cassava, which can be found in almost all regions of the country. Rice as an accompaniment widely used in Brazilian food, mainly in the Southeast and in the central area. Of course, in each region there are particular ingredients that respond to geographical and regional characteristicsof the site.

Feijoada: Considered a national dish, is made from black beans combined with smoked or salted meat, usually pork. Served with manioc flour, fried banana, chopped cabbage, rice and oranges. Other ingredients may also be added, such as eggs and sausages. A curiosity about this dish is that, traditionally, is served Wednesdays and Saturdays.

Caipirinha: is obtained from the distillation of sugarcane juice fermented sugar. The other key ingredient is lime caipirinha, which also usually cut into slices to decorate the glass.

Brigadeiros: this dessert is very similar to chocolate truffles and consists of balls that are made with butter, cocoa powder and condensed milk. Finally, add chocolate chips.

Munguzá: this dessert is very similar to traditional Spanish rice with milk, with the difference that the munguzá was also added sweetcorn and is made with coconut milk.

Quindim: Traditional dessert of the Brazilian Northeast, developed based on egg yolk, grated coconut and sugar. This cream is a direct legacy of Portuguese cuisine, where the egg is a central ingredient.

Vatapá: thick puree cooked with shrimp, coconut milk and bread, considered one of the stars of Bahian cuisine. It then flavored with various ingredients: peanuts, cashew nuts, pepper, onion and ginger. Often used as filler Acarajé.

Customs and Traditions:

With regard to dances and traditional dances of Brazil, first, we have to mention capoeira, by many considered a work of art. In fact it is a very peculiar type of martial art, also known as the "war dance".

Capoeira combines different elements of martial arts, dance, sports and body language. Historically, it was practiced by former slaves, who originated and developed different techniques one of the most important traditional dances of Brazil.

Brazilians also have one of the most intense carnival celebrations, colorful and popular throughout the world, the famous Carnival of Rio de Janeiro. In Brazil, the carnival is a celebration that is experienced as all true national party, where everyone dances to the rhythm of the samba schools, from the smallest to the largest.

The carnival takes place over about 40 days before Easter. During those days, over 2 million people gather in the streets, near the Sambadrome, to observe and participate in the parade of colorful and huge floats along with musicians, dancers and scantily-clad showgirls.

The samba is a very popular musical style in Brazil, who came with the Bantu peoples who came from Africa, in addition, also received a good Portuguese influence. This is a strong pace, all kinds of percussion instruments used and becomes really infectious. It has become a genre so important in Brazil that has led to many new ones, such as bossa nova.

If, music, dance and festivals are extremely important in Brazil, but if something can be considered almost as important, is football. It is often said that Brazilian children before learning anything else, they must first learn to dance samba and secondly to dance samba in a soccer with a ball.

Football is really a tradition and custom, anyone who knows the most basic and simplest of

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