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The Biden administration has discussed granting automakers a temporary reprieve from new rules poised to limit a consumer tax credit, a Michigan senator said Tuesday.
By Ari Natter and Mackenzie HawkinsNovember 29 -
Deploying 1,400 tax collectors — touted by the government as "paramilitary trained" in order to discourage resistance — is the most aggressive in a long line of controversial steps to nearly double the government's revenue collection to a quarter of gross domestic product by 2030.
By David HerblingNovember 28 -
Due to soft market demand, raises will be prioritized for staff who have been promoted, and workers eligible for a bonus will receive one that's lower than in previous years.
By Irina AnghelNovember 27 -
Janet Truncale most recently was the regional MP for EY's financial services organization in the Americas.
By Irina AnghelNovember 16 -
Magazine Luiza's announcement of accounting "inconsistencies" deals another blow to companies that have struggled after the scandal that brought down Americanas.
By Patricia Xavier and Vinícius AndradeNovember 15 -
The U.K. Supreme Court rejected lawyers' claims that London isn't the proper place for the Danish tax agency to bring its claim.
By Katharine GemmellNovember 8 -
The bulk of the cuts will be aimed at the advisory division.
By Irina Anghel and Jamie NimmoNovember 7 -
House Republicans would paid for aid to Israel by slashing funds for the Internal Revenue Service.
By John HarneyNovember 1 -
The Golden State is poised to fall well short of its budget forecasts as the recent stock market slump erodes the state's tax takings.
By Maxwell Adler and Eliyahu KamisherOctober 31 -
Internal auditors have found hundreds of referrals from other lawyers for Camp Lejeune and other cases were bogus, often based on doctored medical records and fictional reports of illness.
By Emily R. Siegel and Kaustuv BasuOctober 30