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Blog: Eastern Panhandle Independent Community (EPIC) Radio
Post: Sci-fi theater playlists Feb 10
Link: http://www.enlightenradio.org/2017/02/sci-fi-theater-playlists-feb-10.html
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Friday, February 10, 2017
Political economy of Iran
via Portside
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John Case
Harpers Ferry, WV
Harpers Ferry, WV
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Eastern Panhandle Independent Community (EPIC) Radio:EPIC Radio -- Friday lineup -- documentary Films, Charleston update, and Sci-Fi Theater
John Case has sent you a link to a blog:
Blog: Eastern Panhandle Independent Community (EPIC) Radio
Post: EPIC Radio -- Friday lineup -- documentary Films, Charleston update, and Sci-Fi Theater
Link: http://www.enlightenradio.org/2017/02/epic-radio-friday-lineup-documentary.html
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Powered by Blogger
https://www.blogger.com/
Blog: Eastern Panhandle Independent Community (EPIC) Radio
Post: EPIC Radio -- Friday lineup -- documentary Films, Charleston update, and Sci-Fi Theater
Link: http://www.enlightenradio.org/2017/02/epic-radio-friday-lineup-documentary.html
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Powered by Blogger
https://www.blogger.com/
NYTimes: Feeling ‘Pressure All the Time’ on Europe’s Treadmill of Temporary Work
Feeling 'Pressure All the Time' on Europe's Treadmill of Temporary Work https://nyti.ms/2k5KCAm
Thursday, February 9, 2017
More Cuts or More Revenue to Address WV Budget Crisis [feedly]
http://www.wvpolicy.org/more-cuts-or-more-revenue-to-address-wv-budget-crisis/
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More Cuts or More Revenue to Address WV Budget Crisis
// WV Center on Budget and Policy
Public News Service – The West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy is warning against trying to close the state's $600 million budget gap entirely or mostly through cuts. Governor Jim Justice wants to raise $450 million in new revenue – with about half of that coming from increased business taxes. Read.
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Taxing Oil, Gas and Minerals Across Borders Poses Challenges for Developing Nations [feedly]
https://blog-imfdirect.imf.org/2017/02/09/taxing-oil-gas-and-minerals-across-borders-poses-challenges-for-developing-nations/
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Taxing Oil, Gas and Minerals Across Borders Poses Challenges for Developing Nations
// iMFdirect – The IMF Blog
By Philip Daniel, Michael Keen, Artur Swistak, and Victor Thuronyi
Seventy percent of the world's poorest people live in countries rich in oil, natural gas or minerals, making effective taxation of these extractive industries critical to alleviating poverty and achieving sustained growth. But national borders make that task much harder, opening possibilities for tax avoidance by multinationals and raising tough jurisdictional issues when resource deposits cross frontiers.
Familiar problems, but much larger
The countries with the most resources are commonly not those that most use them. So it's no surprise that some of the world's first multinationals were extractive companies, such as Standard Oil or Royal Dutch Shell, or that multinationals account for the vast bulk of government revenue from the sector (except where state companies predominate). All the techniques of tax avoidance associated with multinational activities—the subject of the G20-OECD project on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS)—arise in the extractive industries. But while the problems there are similar to those found in other sectors, they are often on a larger scale—and with some distinctive twists.

Take, for instance, problems in applying the "arm's length principle" to the "transfer" prices that multinationals use to allocate taxable profit across the countries where they operate. Under the arm's length principle, transfer prices should be the same as those that would have been set by unrelated parties.
You might think that figuring out such prices would be easier in the extractive industries than in many others. Sometimes, as with oil, active commodity markets do indeed provide good starting points for transfer pricing. And hard-to-price intangibles (patents, branding, and so on) generally play a smaller role than they do in, say, the pharmaceutical industry.
But significant problems do arise in the extractive industries. For some resources (such as bromine, a mineral used in dyes and flame retardants, and its compounds) there are no regularly reported market prices. And the high tax rates applied in the sector can provide especially strong incentives to manipulate transfer prices; so too can the need to arrive at valuations not only for taxes on profits, but also for the royalties (charges on the value of production) commonplace in the extractive industries.
These and other technical challenges are addressed in a new book, International Taxation and the Extractive Industries, which draws on the advice that the IMF provides to its member countries. One issue that the book explores gives a flavor of the challenges that, while not unique to the extractive industries, loom especially large there. This is the very nerdy topic of "indirect transfers of interest," meaning the use of a chain of companies to realize capital gains in a country where they will be lightly taxed, rather than where the asset that generates the gain is located. The sums involved can be huge: in Mauritania, for example, a potential gain of $4 billion on a gold transaction wasn't taxed there.
Pipelines, railroads and borders
Geography presents some distinctive problems. Bringing resources to market can involve building infrastructure that spans national borders, such as a pipeline or railroad linking a mine to a port in a neighboring country. The book looks at the international law involved, and in particular at the difficulties of applying the arm's length principle. As one chapter argues, the range of possible outcomes when trying to apply it is so large as to undermine the credibility of the principle itself.
Resource deposits that cross borders pose problems for coordination between countries—and a risk of conflict. The book looks at the various types of "unitization agreements" that can be reached when countries have agreed sea boundaries, and at experience with joint development zones when they do not.
The book addresses many other questions. To give just one example, how can the impact of international tax arrangements on incentives to invest in the extractive industries be assessed? We can't claim that the book is a page-turner. But we do hope it will help those—whether in government, civil society, business or academia—who have to navigate these issues, which are as important as they are hard.
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Puzder hearing scheduled—now senators have an opportunity to show where they stand [feedly]
http://www.epi.org/blog/puzder-hearing-scheduled-now-senators-have-an-opportunity-to-show-where-they-stand/
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Puzder hearing scheduled—now senators have an opportunity to show where they stand
// Economic Policy Institute Blog
President Trump's nominee for Secretary of Labor, Andrew Puzder, has a new date for his confirmation hearing—February 16, a week from tomorrow. This marks the fifth time the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) will attempt to consider Puzder's nomination. While much speculation surrounds the repeated delays, today's announcement makes one thing clear—President Trump and Senate Republicans are doubling down on a nominee whose policy positions are bad for U.S. workers. Now, senators will have an opportunity to show where they stand.
When HELP Committee members finally get a chance to question Puzder on his positions and plans for the Labor Department, they should demand that he explain his views on minimum wage. Puzder has claimed that increasing the minimum wage costs jobs; senators should ask him how he explains that California has a higher minimum wage than the federal minimum wage yet has seen faster economic growth—including in the restaurant industry—than the country as a whole. Senators should ask Puzder if he knows how many Americans were killed at work before the Occupational Safety and Health Act was enacted in 1970. Does he know how many workers are killed each year now, in an economy twice as big? Still far too many, but fewer than before—demonstrating the importance of meaningful workplace safety standards. Finally, senators should demand that he explain his own company's record of wage and hour and OSHA violations.
President Trump's insistence on advancing Puzder as his nominee for labor secretary reveals that his agenda is to pursue an economy that works great for corporate owners and those at top, but does not work for low-and middle- income families. After decades of wage stagnation and weakened worker protections, we need a labor secretary who will advocate for a strong minimum wage and meaningful worker protections. The Senate now has a chance to demand that workers get a secretary who will guard their rights and advance an agenda that works for them. We will see if they agree that America's workers deserve better than Mr. Puzder.
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