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Encyclopedia > Revenues

In business, revenue is the amount of money that a company actually receives from its activities, mostly from sales of products and/or services to customers. To investors, revenue is less important than profit, or income, which is the amount of money the business has earned after deducting all the business's expenses.


Revenue growth is an important indicator of the market reception of a company's products and services. Yet a company cannot focus solely on revenue, but must also manage the costs of raising the revenue, a fact that many high-revenue companies have learned only painfully.


Consistent revenue growth, as well as income growth, is considered essential for a company's publicly traded stock to be attractive to investors.


The term top line is often heard as a synonym for revenue; this term comes from the fact that in a company's financial reports, revenue is generally shown at the top, then all the company's costs and expenses beneath that, and then the income, or the bottom line, is at the bottom.


For government, revenues refers to the gross proceeds received from taxes, fees, and the like.


For non-profit organizations, revenue from products and services can be expanded to include proceeds from donations, grants, trade in lieu of cash, and other liquid assets.


Revenue is also the name of Ireland's tax agency.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Revenue (374 words)
Revenue is calculated by multiplying the price at which goods or services are sold by the number of units or amount sold.
Revenue is the amount of money that is brought into a company by its business activities.
In the case of government, revenue is the money received from taxation, fees, fines, inter-governmental grants or transfers, securities sales, mineral rights and resource rights, as well as any sales that are made.
Classification Manual - Chapter 7: Revenue (2323 words)
Revenue includes all amounts of money received by a government from external sources during its fiscal year (i.e., those originating "outside the government"), net of refunds and other correcting transactions, other than issuance of debt, sale of investments, and agency or private trust transactions.
One important feature of tax revenue is the need to pass a "visibility test." That is, the tax levy must be visible to the taxpayer as being a tax and not buried under the guise of another revenue.
Also excluded from insurance trust revenue and classified as general revenue are tax receipts credited directly to insurance trust funds and intergovernmental aid, such as grants and shared taxes for support of insurance trust activities (see Note 3).
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