The myth of green growth FT
Tax office agrees to year's delay for some big companies to own up to tax problems |
The great Morrissey, the finest bloom of the flowering of postwar British culture borne on a welfare state won by an organised and compassionate working class, has noticed this in his own field:
In the guise of serving the public, the Brit Awards have hijacked modern music in order to kill off the heritage that produced so many interesting people, to such a degree that we could not imagine anyone who has ever truly affected the course of British music to be on stage at the 02 collecting a deserved award.
World’s top economists just made the case for why we still need English majors Washington Post: “A great migration is happening on U.S. college campuses. Ever since the fall of 2008, a lot of students have walked out of English and humanities lectures and into STEM classes, especially computer science and engineering. English majors are down more than a quarter (25.5 percent) since the Great Recession, according to data compiled by the National Center for Education Statistics. It’s the biggest drop for any major tracked by the center in its annual data and is quite startling, given that college enrollment has jumped in the past decade. Ask any college student or professor why this big shift from studying Chaucer to studying coding is happening and they will probably tell you it’s about jobs. As students feared for their job prospects, they — and their parents — wanted a degree that would lead to a steady paycheck after graduation. The perception is that STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) is the path to employment. Majors in computer science and health fields have nearly doubled from 2009 to 2017. Engineering and math have also seen big jumps. As humanities majors slump to the lowest level in decades, calls are coming from surprising places for a revival. Some prominent economists are making the case for why it still makes a lot of sense to major (or at least take classes) in humanities alongside more technical fields. Nobel Prize winner Robert Shiller’s new book “Narrative Economics” opens with him reminiscing about an enlightening history class he took as an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. He wrote that what he learned about the Great Depression was far more useful in understanding the period of economic and financial turmoil than anything he learned in his economic courses…”
How a Veteran Reporter Worked with Giuliani’s Associates to Launch the Ukraine Conspiracy ProPublica
Pantheon Books is publishing BITWISE: A LIFE IN CODE. The New York Times Book Review kindly says, ““[Auerbach] writes well about databases and servers, but what’s really distinctive about this book is his ability to dissect Joyce and Wittgenstein as easily as C++ code.”
- Tax dodging must be an issue in a snap election (25 Oct 2019)
- Thatcher was right: income from wealth should be taxed the same as income from work (25 Oct 2019)
- EU states lead global 'tax haven' list (25 Oct 2019)
- EU readies stricter rules against money laundering: document (25 Oct 2019)
- HMRC vows to double efforts on tax avoidance (25 Oct 2019)
- Get multinationals to disclose where they pay taxes, MEPs tell member states (25 Oct 2019)
- Facebook pledged $1bn to help California's housing crisis, can't they pay their taxes instead (25 Oct 2019)
- Make no mistake: Medicare for All would cut taxes for most Americans (25 Oct 2019)
- Westminster should hand over tax-raising powers to councils (24 Oct 2019)
- Digital tax is poor fix for corporate tax avoidance (23 Oct 2019)
- Airbnb probed by UK tax authorities (22 Oct 2019)
- UK government pays millions to firms that use tax havens (21 Oct 2019)
- Demos Report - Value Added: How better government procurement can build a fairer Britain (21 Oct 2019)
- Entrepreneurs' tax break fails to boost investment, finds IFS (21 Oct 2019)
- IFS Report - Low rates of capital gains tax on business income lead to large tax savings but do not boost investment (21 Oct 2019)
- Are US billionaires really going to pay more tax? (21 Oct 2019)
- Top fund manager forced to resign after BBC investigation (21 Oct 2019)
- Tax commitments rewritten in Brexit deal (21 Oct 2019)
- A new Brexit deal - what has changed and what happens next? (21 Oct 2019)
- The Corporate Offence of Failure to Prevent the Facilitation of tax evasion (21 Oct 2019)
- 362 perfectly acceptable ways to avoid tax (21 Oct 2019)
- UK Government publishes Brexit bill (21 Oct 2019)
- The UK is set to give up the best deal any EU member state has ever had (21 Oct 2019)
Big Thinker: Socrates - The importance of the examined life
Gmail users hooked on free storage face new fees as data limits are capped
Bloomberg: “Google lured billions of consumers to its digital services by offering copious free cloud storage. That’s beginning to change. The Alphabet Inc. unit has whittled down some free storage offers in recent months, while prodding more users toward a new paid cloud subscription called Google One. That’s happening as the amount of data people stash online continues to soar. When people hit those caps, they realize they have little choice but to start paying, or risk losing access to emails, photos and personal documents. The cost isn’t excessive for most consumers, but at the scale Google operates, this could generate billions of dollars in extra revenue each year for the company. Google didn’t respond to an email seeking comment…”
Google Accused of Creating Spy Tool to Squelch Worker Dissent - Bloomberg:
“Google employees are accusing the company’s leadership of developing
an internal surveillance tool that they believe will be used to monitor
workers’ attempts to organize protests and discuss labor rights. Earlier
this month, employees said they discovered that a team within the
company was creating the new tool for the custom Google Chrome browser
installed on all workers’ computers and used to search internal systems.
The concerns were outlined in a memo written by a Google employee and
reviewed by Bloomberg News and by three Google employees who requested
anonymity because they aren’t authorized to talk to the press. The tool
would automatically report staffers who create a calendar event with
more than 10 rooms or 100 participants, according to the employee memo.
The most likely explanation, the memo alleged, “is that this is an
attempt of leadership to immediately learn about any workers
organization attempts.”…”