“Every funeral may justly be considered as a summons to prepare for that state, into which it shews us that we must sometime enter; and the summons is more loud and piercing, as the event of which it warns us is at less distance. To neglect at any time preparation for death, is to sleep on our post at a siege, but to omit it in old age, is to sleep at an attack.”
Unlike taxes, death is the great democratizer.
Binance CEO CZ quits, Richard Teng to take over; crypto exchange to pay US$4 billion for money laundering The Business Times
Neil Chenoweth and Edmund Tadros: AFR journalists win Gold Walkley for PwC story
Analyse the following four images. For each image, guess what is being taxed. Use only the information in the image.
Top left going clockwise: windows, nothing, non-roof stories, frontage.
One of the examples of how people react to economic incentives:
Architectural tax avoidance UK : tax on windows Vietnam: tax on frontage France: tax on floors (roof exempted) Brazil: tax on church construction (when finished)ATO bolsters defences around personal data
Security upgrades this week aim to counter an “unprecedented rise” in identity fraud.
What to do to protect your SMSF from fraud
Beefed up proof-of-identity rules aim to protect SMSFs from scams but will mean more paperwork for trustees.
Meg HeffronContributorIt seems that a new scam is reported every other day and not surprisingly both the government and private organisations are becoming more careful when it comes to knowing exactly who they are talking to.
A few years ago, directors of all companies (including SMSF trustee companies) were required to get a “director ID”. This was a unique number issued to each person that is a little like a tax file number, except that it is only required by people who are directors of companies.