Biden Energizes Global Effort to Keep Multinationals From Dodging Taxes
Apr 16 2021, 3:50 AM
April 15 2021, 1:30 PM
April 16 2021, 3:50 AM
(Bloomberg Businessweek) When I interviewed Kimberly Clausing in 2017, she was an economics professor at Reed College in Portland, Ore., with intriguing but seemingly unachievable ideas for how to make multinational corporations pay taxes. I wrote that her plan was worth studying âif only to see how much better things could be if politics didnât get in the way.â
(Bloomberg Businessweek) When I interviewed Kimberly Clausing in 2017, she was an economics professor at Reed College in Portland, Ore., with intriguing but seemingly unachievable ideas for how to make multinational corporations pay taxes. I wrote that her plan was worth studying âif only to see how much better things could be if politics didnât get in the way.â
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Stark disparities in campus reopenings
Two students wear face masks at All Saints’ Day School in Carmel on Dec. 10, 2020. Photo by David Rodriguez, The Salinas Californian
As California’s impasse over reopening schools drags on, its disparities are becoming clearer. Among the state’s richest schools, nearly 7 in 10 elementary school students attend a district offering some form of in-person learning compared to less than 1 in 10 students in districts with the highest poverty, according to an analysis of state data from CalMatters’ Ricardo Cano and Jeremia Kimelman. And the discrepancy between public and private schools is just as stark. Here’s a closer look at the numbers: