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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Billionaires only, please! London vault for the ultra-rich opens

There is a possibility Jeremy Corbyn will be Prime Minister of the UK by the end of the week. There is no better time to highlight how, no matter what Corbyn does or whatever position he takes, his critics will attack him - even if they totally contradict themselves (thread).




"Did I not tell you, Monsieur, that we are all the servants of Chance?" 


“When I was five years old, my mother always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down “happy”. They told me I didn’t understand the assignment, and I told them they didn’t understand life.” – John Lennon


From disbelief to dread: the dismal new routine of life in Sydney’s smoke haze Guardian



Taxing Tech: The Future of Digital Taxation, by Lilian Faulhaber (Georgetown)



Economist Logo (2015)An academic disagreement has big real-world implications
Over a decade before thousands of protesters gathered in Zuccotti Park in New York in 2011, a little-known researcher in France sat down to write about income inequality in a new way. “The focus of our study consists in comparing the evolution of the incomes of the top 10%, the top 1%, the top 0.5%, and so on,” Thomas Piketty wrote in a paper in 1998. With his long-term co-author, Emmanuel Saez, Mr Piketty pioneered the use of tax data over survey data, thereby doing a better job of capturing the incomes of the richest. He revealed that “the 1%” had made out like bandits at the expense of “the 99%”. His research gave Occupy Wall Street its vocabulary.

 

Pulp fiction? Film noir? No, it's Casey council, and it's all too real


At the centre of this pot-boiled political thriller is an ageing, gold chain-wearing, Ferrari-driving developer by the name of John Charles Woodman.




Samantha Jacoby (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities), Policymakers Should Ensure Pass-Throughs Pay More of Taxes They Owe:
High-income taxpayers drive much of the “tax gap” — the gap between what taxpayers owe and what they voluntarily pay on time — finds a new paper from Professor Natasha Sarin and former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers [Shrinking the Tax Gap: Approaches And Revenue Potential], citing new IRS data for 2011 to 2013. That’s unsurprising, because the tax gap’s single largest source is the underreporting of pass-through income (income from sources such as S corporations, partnerships, and sole proprietorships), which overwhelmingly flows to wealthy households. IRS auditors looking to curb tax evasion as well as policymakers looking to close tax loopholes should make pass-throughs a prime target. ...
Taxpayers who didn’t file a return and those underpaying the IRS accounted for 20 percent of the gross tax gap, and income underreporting the other 80 percent, the latest IRS data show. Pass-throughs accounted for nearly half (44 percent) of the underreporting gap, counting both underreported income and self-employment taxes.

Using History to Understand Hidden Wealth in the UK

Between 1920 and 1992, English elites concealed 20-32% of their wealth. Accounting for hidden wealth eliminates one-third of the observed decline of top 10% wealth share over the past century.


Ten years after Labor dumped me as premier, it's high time it cleaned up its act

As Labor confronts its demons, its former NSW leader writes on what it needs to do to regain the faith of voters.

Police chief questioned at royal commission, denies 'attempt to conceal' Lawyer X info


The banana on the wall was a masterpiece – until somebody ate it

Hong Kong: A different kind of Cold War Asia Times

China Hints U.S. Blacklist Imminent in Threat to Trade Talks Bloomberg

Who Pays the Tax on Imports from China? The Big Picture

Billionaires only, please! London vault for the ultra-rich opens Guardian




Uber Says 3,045 Sex Assaults Were Reported in U.S. Rides Last Year NYT. “‘The numbers are jarring and hard to digest,’ Tony West, Uber’s chief legal officer, said in an interview. ‘What it says is that Uber is a reflection of the society it serves.'” 
Unfree Agents The Baffler


Leigh Osofsky (North Carolina), Constructing Doctrines For Modern Legislative Realities (JOTWELL) (reviewing Jesse M. Cross (South Carolina), The Staffer's Error Doctrine, 56 Harv. J. on Legis. 83 (2019)):
Jotwell (2020)In recent years, legal scholars have begun to focus in earnest on the realities of the legislative process. Just to name a few topics, this research has included studies about congressional drafting and canonsagency involvement in legislative draftinghow legislative drafting has changed over timehow statutory drafters make discrete drafting decisions, and much more. Understanding these realities is essential to how we use, and make meaning of, the statutes that pervade our legal system.
Jesse Cross’s recently published article, The Staffer’s Error Doctrine, is an important contribution to this body of work. In this article, Cross provides a deep account of how Congress has come to rely upon what Cross calls a “staffer delegation model.” Cross explains that Congress has not always relied so extensively on congressional staff to draft legislation. Rather, Congress previously used a mix of committees and delegation to agencies. Cross argues that concern over executive power, along with expanded internal bureaucracy, has prompted Congress instead to increasingly turn to an army of congressional staffers to draft legislation. As Cross explores, members of Congress have acknowledged that this turn to staffers gives staffers not only clerical tasks, but also significant power to make policy through legislation. And, as Cross persuasively argues, this is a systematic byproduct of a Constitution that creates generalist legislators, notwithstanding a world that increasingly requires subject-matter experts to create good law. ...



‘Dark Waters’ Tells the Origin Story of a Public Health Nightmare. We’re Still Living It.

On a docu-drama that recounts the first major suit against toxic “forever chemicals” and what’s being done about them now.