Skip to main content

Home/ IB Geo NIST/ Group items tagged tax

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Andy Dorn

The Banker - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    "Campaign video by Richard Curtis and Bill Nighy, about the Robin Hood Tax, a tiny tax on bank transactions that could raise hundreds of billions for public services and to tackle poverty and climate change at home and around the world."
Andy Dorn

global trade in goods and services wto - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    "Campaign video by Richard Curtis and Bill Nighy, about the Robin Hood Tax, a tiny tax on bank transactions that could raise hundreds of billions for public services and to tackle poverty and climate change at home and around the world."
Andy Dorn

A Failed Experiment - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    "Financial tycoons now often pay a lower tax rate than their secretaries."
Ameya Badwe

Slide Show: 8 Corporations That Owe You Money | The Nation - 2 views

  •  
    83 of the US's 100 corporations hide fortunes in tax havens, even as many of those corporations were receiving federal dollars from the government's TARP bailout. Why were these corporations receiving taxpayer money when they weren't even paying their own taxes?
Andy Dorn

Daily chart: Fortune favours the big | The Economist - 0 views

  •  
    Fortune favours the big Jul 12th 2012, 15:45 by The Economist online Where are the biggest companies in the world WHEN RANKED by revenue America has almost twice as many companies in the biggest 500 than any other country, according to Fortune. This is not solely down to its size; America's ratio of companies to people is also striking. It has one company on Fortune's list for every 2.4m people, only a handful of European economies do better. China is moving in on America's spot though. In 2005 the Middle Kingdom housed only 16 of the biggest firms. This year it has 73-more than Japan. In contrast to the American way, China's government has a hand in most of its biggest firms. The highest ranked is Sinopec, an oil producer, which came in fifth. A look at the ratio of big firms to GDP highlights the places where tax is low and business is easy to do. Luxembourg (not shown) does best with 34 companies per trillion dollars, followed by Switzerland and Taiwan. All 500 firms on the list racked up combined revenue of $29trn. From this $1.6trn was profit, about the same as Australia's GDP.
1 - 20 of 37 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page