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Home > Low Intro Rates > Chase Business Rebate Card

Chase Business Rebate Card

3% Cash Back** for purchases
1% Cash Back on all other purchases
0% Intro FIXED APR for up to 12 billing cycles on purchases*
No Annual Fee
FREE additional cards
Up to $35,000 credit for your business


MAKE YOUR BUSINESS EVEN MORE REWARDING

Apply Now for the

Chase Business Rebate Card


and start earning cash back on all of your business purchases.

  • 3% Cash Back2,3 for purchases at restaurants, gas stations, office supply stores, building supply stores, hardware and home improvement stores
  • 1% Cash Back on all other purchases
  • 0% APR for up to 12 Months1 on purchases and balance transfers
  • No Annual Fee
  • FREE additional cards for your employees, FREE quarterly reports, and other online account management tools to help you keep track of your business expenses


1 APR is valid for introductory period so long as you comply with the terms of your account. Also, we apply payments to introductory balances before balances with higher APRs. This means that the length of your introductory period may vary based on your payment amounts and the APRs for other balances on your account. Learn more about rates, fees, and other cost information by reviewing Pricing & Terms.

2 You will earn 1 base point for each $1 of net purchases. In addition, you will earn 2 bonus points for each $1 of eligible net purchases made at retail establishments that classify their merchant locations for Visa/MasterCard as gas stations, restaurants, hardware stores, home improvement stores, and office supply stores. Purchases not eligible to receive the 2 bonus points include, but are not limited to, purchases made at convenience stores, superstores, warehouse clubs, and discount stores.

3 You are earning your rewards as points. If you choose to redeem for cash back, 3 points equals 3% or $0.03 cash back and 1 point equals 1% or $0.01 cash back. For example, 5,000 points can be redeemed for a $50 check.

2

Apply now Back

DID YOU KNOW?

Working at home no longer means being hunched over a computer in the basement. A home business can now be an online business, connected with the world, working at home making money online by Internet marketing through your website.

Promoting an online business website in the right way is like installing bright sunny windows in that basement.

To learn the options available to you for making money through your online business and for promoting a home business website, allot time to research.

Make “Google” your middle name; visit websites of your competitors in the home business market - online business vendors, potential customers, seminars –whatever applies to your home business.

Educate yourself on options available for those working at home, from online business affiliate programs to web rings. Make it part of your new job working at home to keep abreast of the changes in online business and home business strategies.

The good news is many online business tools are free on the Internet to those working at home. Better news is that people on the Internet love to share their knowledge with others involved in home business and online business.

Find message boards relative to home business in your field, get in there, read and ask questions. The rumour mill is alive and Well on the Internet – take some things with a grain of salt. But there are a lot of experts out there in the home business And online business worlds happy to share information with others working at home.

When running a home business, your co-workers, peers and resource people are not sitting next to you in an office. They are in their own online business basement office. Pull up the blinds and let the sun in on your home business. You’ll find you are not alone, even if you are working at home.

ELENI ANASTASIADOY

As gold topped $500, the news became front-page across the country, and radio and TV financial programs led off talking about the price of gold. Invariably, all noted that gold had reached nearly a two-decade high. Yet it is doubtful that any of the reporters assigned to the story really grasped the importance of gold topping $500.

Further, few reports dared suggest that the price of gold could climb still higher. Gold stands a good chance of seeing higher prices before the inevitable price correction, which always follows such a strong move.

Most reports saw $500 gold as a novelty, not the ominous sign that something is drastically wrong with the state of financial affairs in the United States. The truth: gold is responding to profligate spending in both the government and the public sectors. Further, gold is rising because of the massive inflation by the Federal Reserve under Alan Greenspan. Let's take a brief glance at only one reason for gold's jump above $500: federal spending.

The federal government now has more than $8 trillion in official (on the books) debt. Only three years ago, gross public debt stood at $6 trillion. For those calculating, that is a one-third debt increase in only three years. The United States took 226 years to run up a debt of $6 trillion. In three years, an additional $2 trillion was tacked on.

According to The Privateer, present projected spending will push the official debt to $11 trillion before the end of Bush's second term. If this becomes reality, in only eight years the official federal debt will have nearly doubled. Additionally, there are the "off-books" liabilities.

Unfunded U.S. government liabilities—Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, military pensions, federal workers' pensions, and other promise such as picking up the tabs for bankrupt corporate pensions—will reach $50 trillion by the end of the year and climb to $70 trillion by the end of Bush's second term.

The official debt is the accumulation of years of federal deficit spending. This fiscal year's deficit (October 1, 2005 thru September 30, 2006) is projected to be $521 billion. Deficit spending looks to get worse.

Pulling statistics from the respected Congressional Budget Office's January report on the federal budget and economy, Citizens for Tax Justice show annual deficits under Bush policies skyrocketing to $1.164 trillion by 2015. These projections are seven times the Bush administration's numbers because the White House assumes, among other things, that current tax cuts "sunset," that Iraq and Afghanistan expenditures will suddenly end, and that federal appropriations will "plummet" as a share of the economy.

The Congressional Budget Office forecasts that by 2013 "the government is likely to be spending more to pay interest on the debt than on all domestic appropriations put together." Any wonder the price of gold topped $500?

It appears unlikely that the problem of deficit spending will be addressed any time soon in Washington. Sadly, our lawmakers do not yet even see it as a problem. While it is true that Democrats never miss an opportunity to carp about Bush's refusal to "roll back" his tax break for "rich Americans," the Democrats would be as quiet as church mice if the deficit spending were for welfare programs. Either way, the results would be the same: continued deficit spending.

The way gold topped $500 was a big deal because the price of gold is the thermometer for the health of a nation's currency. A rising price for gold suggests a fever is building. However, the reporting suggests that few reporters understand the United States is infected with a deadly virus, not a common cold.







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