BHP Billiton is reporting details of its tax thanks to new UK regulations, however its still not completely transparent.
David Crosling/AAP
A number of Australian companies have released tax reports to the public in a bid to show transparency, however those reports are still incomplete.
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Property inequality keeps on growing, stopping it will take strong principles and brave politicians.
University students are fed up that their calls for free education are being ignored.
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South Africa’s higher education minister has dealt with fee increments for 2017 but sidestepped students’ fundamental issue: an ongoing call to make higher education free for all.
Standing strong.
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Why the fanfare around Apple’s next product launch is already eclipsing its recent tax trouble.
In his Bloomberg Address on Thursday Scott Morrison talked of ‘the taxed and the taxed-not’.
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Treasurer Scott Morrison has given notice of a fresh assault on the crucial challenge of budget repair. Let’s hope he and Malcolm Turnbull have learned from the unfortunate self-destructing experience…
Chevron’s Gorgon project is one of a few in Australia subject to the petroleum resource rent tax.
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Australia is missing out on revenue from some gas projects because the petroleum resource rent tax doesn’t apply.
Philip Green: hit hard by MPs.
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Philip Green has been vilified by MPs just as Theresa May vows to take on bad behaviour in big business. New research reveals just how urgent a task this is for voters.
Australia should be helping its premium wine industry, not hindering it through tax.
Luke Costin/AAP
The reputation of Australia’s winemarkers is at risk because of the way taxes and subsidies distort the industry.
All the policies announced on multinational tax avoidance so far, fail to address one of the simplest avoidance measures used.
Dan Himbrechts/AAP
The reelected Coalition government will be forced to confront multinational tax avoidance more effectively or suffer the revenue problems.
Do the Chancellor’s sums add up.
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Rates of corporation tax have a very human impact.
Not alone.
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Lionel Messi is not the first footballer to break financial laws and he probably won’t be the last.
A world of deceit.
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Fibbers beware: experts have developed a new digital lie detector.
The uncertainty in financial markets from Brexit throws a spanner in the works of the election campaign in its final week.
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Business Briefing: Zombie measures, crackdowns and Brexit worries
The Conversation 14,4 Mo (download)
As the world tries to get a handle on what a Brexit means, D-Day looms for both Labor and the Coalition.
In announcing the costings the Coalition has sought the mantle of better economic managers.
AAP/Adrian Muscat
The Coalition says it has costed its additional expenditure and will deliver $2.3 billion in savings, in contrast to Labor.
The economic slogans from all the major parties seemed to have fallen flat during this election campaign.
AAP image
For an election that is supposed to be based on who will manage the economy better, the debate has been disappointing.
Labor will cut the family tax benefit but less than the Coalition.
Dan Himbrechts/AAP
Labor’s proposed reform of family benefits will impact on higher income families.
A famous US article accused a generation of retirees of being greedy.
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The current campaign against proposed changes to superannuation has little basis in reality.
The temporary deficit levy is a tempting revenue raiser for any political party.
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Labor is arguing that Australia should keep the temporary deficit levy, a tax introduced by the Coalition government to help reduce the budget deficit.
Australia is above the OECD average for some taxes, below average for others.
AAP Image/April Fonti
Australian Council of Social Service chief Cassandra Goldie told Q&A that Australia is among the lowest-taxing countries in the OECD. Is that accurate?
Boston Tea Party: aversion to tax goes way back.
WD Cooper/Library of Congress
The war of words: why a report on the EU referendum labelled costs a ‘Brexit tax’.