cheap there. and palm beach county comes to mind, a shock for a lot of northerners who come down, but i guess everything else more than makes up for that. there s a the income taxes is the main thing and inheritance taxes as well. prices are lower from somebody coming from the states where most of the exodus is happening any state with a tent city, washington state, oregon, california, new york, but the price level seems cheap, but it s rising, this gap is slowing between those two areas right now. you know, there s just a lot there is a lot of people moving and it s raising costs and it will ultimately equalize and the country is getting older and people are going to move to warmer climates in general. that was accelerated with early retirements through covid in situations like that. neil: do you know what i noticed, and i don t know if you experience it in texas, but a lot of new york, new jersey transplants and they ve made, you know, florida driving a
returns, and that was according to the washington post. let s also be clear, in his former life as a tax attorney, redding has, quote, defended a billionaire at the irs accused of hiding money in offshore accounts, and venture capitalists, the agency that used accounting to shelter assets. as well as the heirs of a millionaire defense contractors not to fend off inheritance taxes. why with this type of guy, number one, be appointed in the first place, but still be running the irs? i will note that interfere in this type of audit is a felony, it s a federal crime. well katie, that s a great question. i think all of us are sitting there as more and more information is coming out about trump s finances, with allegations of impropriety. there s a huge new york times investigation as they look at his real estate empire, they re playing games with the valuations. some of that is either alluded to or lead to the new york state criminal investigation about his tax issues. i think everybody i
how would you find that money? it would equate to something of that order because the amount of borrowing that he had, public sector borrowing, is not what he expected it to be. the government has borrowed significantly less than expected and it has had significantly more taxes coming in. not only from energy companies, from the cost of fuel at the pump, the government is getting a windfall from this and also getting money in in a range of income tax and inheritance taxes they have not expected. the government has a lot more money than it thought it has and a lot more manoeuvre than people attempt struggling to put food on the table. the chancellor should be thinking of them for first and foremost, because inflation is running at 6%. on the very basics, as campaigners like jack monroe have pointed out, that is more on food at a very basic level. the chancellor
crafted pdf file. south korea s antitrust regulator has fined google $177 million, accusing the american tech giant of abusing its dominant market position. the regulator said google had blocked local smartphone makers from using other operating systems. supermarket chain tesco is to trial its zero waste shopping service at 10 stores in the east of england. customers will be able to buy common household goods in reusable packaging that can be returned to the store to be used again. the trial aims to meet demand for less single use plastic packaging. leading us democrats have released plans for a partial rollback of former us president donald trump s tax cuts. they propose raising the top rate of corporation tax to 26.5% from 21%. wealthy individuals would see a jump in their income taxes, as well as higher capital gains and inheritance taxes. the plans, to be debated this week, would help fund the democrats 3$.5 trillion domestic investment