‘Can’t be trusted’: Reckless, improper conduct should rule former top official out for life
Confidential report found former home affairs boss Michael Pezzullo was ‘reckless’ in engagement with Liberal powerbroker
Previously unreleased report obtained via freedom of information battle says Pezzullo exceeded ‘boundaries of normal public service practice’
Rex Patrick - The mandarin who got caught. Mike Pezzullo inquiry details revealed
Previously unreleased report obtained via freedom of information battle says Pezzullo exceeded ‘boundaries of normal public service practice’
Rex Patrick - The mandarin who got caught. Mike Pezzullo inquiry details revealed
When people of conscience are removed from power, we all need to worry
As The Telegraph reported yesterday: Pete Hegseth fired the most senior US army officer one month into the war with Iran. The sacking is the latest
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Like it or not, the appeal of wealth taxes appears to be very strong
I am aware that we post a lot of polls on this blog these days, although I readily admit most are on our videos and
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ANAO report puts Australian Army Redback IFV procurement under the microscope
Repetti Presents “Private Equity, Health Calamity: How Our Tax Laws Aid Private Equity Investment in Hospitals and Nursing Homes” Today at Irvine
James R. Repetti (Boston College) presents Private Equity, Health Calamity: How Our Tax Laws Aid Private Equity Investment in Hospitals and Nursing Homes at Irvine, as part of its Graduate Tax Policy Colloquium:
The social welfare impact of investments by Private Equity funds (PEs) in various sectors of our economy is mixed due to the significant debt imposed on PE target companies and the short investment horizon of PE funds. With respect to PE investments in hospitals and nursing homes, however, most empirical studies suggest that PE investments significantly harm welfare. The large amounts of debt incurred by the targets of PE acquisitions increase the risk of default and contribute to excessive cost-cutting measures that harm patients.
Our tax system contains two features that significantly promote PE acquisitions. First, our tax system exempts gain realized by charitable organizations from the sale of their hospitals and nursing homes to for-profit purchasers. Theory predicts, and empirical evidence suggests, that tax-exempt sellers are willing to sell hospitals for less than a taxable seller would be due to this tax exemption. Given that these assets will no longer be deployed in the charitable sector, our tax system should not subsidize transfers to for-profit purchasers that reduce social welfare by exempting the gain from taxation. Even if the tax-exempt seller is not sharing its exemption with the for-profit buyer, policy considerations suggest that gain from such a sale should not be exempt. Since the tax-exempt seller has chosen to stop participating in the health-related activity, this is an appropriate time to return the foregone tax revenue to the government for a determination of its future best use, rather than allowing the tax-exempt to unilaterally make that decision.
NY Times: Justice Dept. Struggles to Respond to Trump’s Suit Against I.R.S.
In a previous post on TaxProf Blog, we had highlighted President Trump’s lawsuit against the IRS. In an article in The New York Times, Andrew Duehren and Alan Feuer report:
The Justice Department is struggling to decide how to respond to President Trump’s lawsuit demanding at least $10 billion from the I.R.S., as the department’s lawyers try to resolve by a mid-April deadline the profound ethical questions the case raises, according to two people familiar with the dynamic. . . .
While former Justice Department officials see clear flaws in the president’s case, some Trump administration officials worry that assigning a lawyer to contest it would pose an unworkable conflict, given that such a person ultimately works for the president, according to the two people. Defending the case could also contradict a White House executive order that binds all government lawyers to the president’s interpretation of the law. . . .
In a normal proceeding, the Justice Department would likely start by trying to throw out the case because it came too late, former department attorneys said. In other cases stemming from the leaks, government lawyers have also said the I.R.S. could not be blamed for Mr. Littlejohn’s actions, since he was a contractor for Booz Allen Hamilton and not an I.R.S. employee.
Mr. Trump’s demand for at least $10 billion in damages for the leak struck several former tax lawyers at the Justice Department as outlandish.
The article notes that a group of former government officials filed an amicus brief, arguing, among other things, that the lawsuit has significant defects in it. The brief can be read in its entirety here.
LinkedIn Is Illegally Searching Your ComputerBrowsergate
What’s Cheaper: Fueling Your Car With Gas or Electricity?
A comparison on EV charging expenses state by state in the US. Any similar data in other countries based on recent electricity costs?




