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Tuesday, September 24, 2024

The Double Irish Dutch Sandwich: End of a Tax Evasion Strategy


Most of the greatest evils that man has inflicted upon man have come through people feeling quite certain about something which, in fact, was false.

~ Bertrand Russell


Israel launches airstrikes on Hezbollah, killing hundreds

Israel is shifting its focus to the northern frontier, where Hezbollah has been firing rockets in support of Hamas.


HSBC calls on tech firms to help refund victims of fraud


Age of Rage: 26 Million Americans Believe Political Violence is Justified Jonathan Turley


Poor harvest leaves UK bakers dependent on wheat imports to meet demand Bakery Info 


Ghost - Jay Je Yoon Jung lived a life away from the public eye, until global authorities brought it crashing down 





The Double Irish Dutch Sandwich: End of a Tax Evasion Strategy Conversable Economist


Global stocks rally after jumbo Fed cut FT


At the Money: Can You Have Too Much Money? Barry Ritholtz, The Big Picture


Pakistan Promised China a New Militarized Naval Base, Leaked Documents Reveal Drop Site


Is there a rationale for natural monopoly regulation in AI services?


Three mistakes in the moral mathematics of existential risk.  I don’t agree with everything in there, but quite an interesting piece, forthcoming in Ethics by David Thorstad.


The Tax Office has seen a “positive behavioural shift” among public companies and multinationals as assurance ratings rise and high-risk disclosures decline.

Most of the country’s big businesses are meeting their tax obligations and are more willing than ever “to do the right thing”, the Tax Office said, reporting improved assurance ratings and disclosures.

The ATO said there had been a “positive behavioural shift” in recently released reports on public and multinational businesses.

“A cumulative shift towards positive taxpayer behaviours can be observed over multiple reports, as we see increased proportions of low-risk disclosures and increasing high assurance ratings,” it said.

Top end of town more compliant than ever, ATO reports