Friday, July 19, 2024

Targeting Tax Avoidance Enablers

 

This is a 3200-year old attendance sheet found in Deir el-Medina, Egypt.

Reasons for workers being absent include "brewing beer", "embalming brother", "drinking with Khonsu" and "bitten by a scorpion".

China’s President, Xi Jinping, has suffered a stroke during the Third Plenary Session of the Chinese Communist Party

Why Your Local Bank Branch Looks More Like A Starbucks These Days

Increasingly, customers are visiting physical banks to receive guidance on products such as mortgages, loans and financial planning, while accessing more basic services online. These trends are industrywide, and Citi isn’t the only bank to rethink its physical spaces in response. - Bloomberg


Labour could take action against tax havens

I have published this video this morning. In it, I argue that Labour needs to take action now that it is in office to finally end the curse of abusive secrecy created by the UK's tax havens.


Labor urged to include tax havens in profit shifting crackdown

New corporate tax transparency rules should be strengthened to take in more known tax havens, including Luxembourg, Malta, and Cyprus, according to new analysis by the EU Tax Observatory.

Federal Labor last month introduced updated legislation for so-called country-by-country tax transparency rules, designed to give the public a better understanding of how much tax multinational companies pay relative to their activities in Australia.



Who’s Consuming The News And Why Not

Instead of a left-right thing, the report repeatedly locates a different divide — between people who are interested in news and politics and those who are not. - NiemanLab

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Tax Journalist And Best-Selling Author David Cay Johnston Joins University Faculty



  1. The Invisibility of the American Emigrant, by Laura Snyder (Association of Americans Resident Overseas)
  2. [665 Downloads]  FATCA is Not the Answer, by Karen Alpert (FixTheTaxTreaty.org), John Richardson (TaxResidentAbroad.com) & Laura Snyder (Association of Americans Resident Overseas)
  3. [659 Downloads]  Does the Federal Budget Trump Constitutional Rights?, by Laura Snyder (Association of Americans Resident Overseas)
  4. [376 Downloads]  Sweeping Changes and an Uncertain Legacy: The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, by William Gale (Brookings Institution; Google Scholar), Jeffrey Hoopes (North Carolina; Google Scholar) & Kyle Pomerleau (American Enterprise Institute) (reviewed by Sloan Speck (Colorado; Google Scholarhere)
  5. [267 Downloads]  Wealth Taxes Under the Constitution: An Originalist Analysis, David Schizer (Columbia) & Steven Calabresi (Northwestern) (reviewed by Mirit Eyal-Cohen (Alabama; Google Scholarhere)

Clarifying The Uncertainty Over Direct And Indirect Taxes In Moore v. United States





Geekwire : “Journalists used artificial intelligence to check the authenticity of images from the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump in Pennsylvania on Saturday night — demonstrating both the potential and the limitations of AI technology in minimizing the spread of misinformation online. AI tools offered by Seattle-based non-partisan nonprofit organization TrueMedia.orgwere used by reporters to assess images that spread on social media after the shooting, including a photo that appeared to capture a bullet in mid-air behind Trump’s head. That picture was taken by New York Times photographer Doug Mills. But the tendency of social media users to post images without attribution can make it difficult to determine the origins of content, especially when news is breaking. While cautioning that its results were experimental, TrueMedia.org correctly indicated that photo was likely not manipulated, according to Oren Etzioni, the organization’s founder. In a similar way, responding to a query from another journalist, the TrueMedia AI tools also found little evidence of manipulation in what turned out to be an Associated Press photograph of Trump raising his fist after the incident. That picture also circulated widely on social media…”


Ex-CIA Analyst Worked for South Korea in Exchange for Louis Vuitton Handbag: Prosecutors.

A former senior official of the White House National Security Council who also once worked as an analyst for the CIA has been indicted on criminal charges accusing her of working as an agent for the government of South Korea allegedly in exchange for luxury gifts including designer handbags.

Sue Mi Terry, the wife of Washington Post columnist Max Boot, was charged with failing to register as a foreign agent and conspiracy to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act, according to an indictment made public Tuesday in Manhattan federal court. Prosecutors allege that Terry promoted South Korea’s policy positions, disclosed nonpublic U.S. government information to South Korean intelligence officers, and facilitated access for South Korean government officials to their American counterparts.

Max Boot