Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Inebriation of the press is the best defense against tyranny

Journalists in India fear a nationwide alcohol ban. Prime ministerial candidate Modi’s home province of Gujarat has banned alcohol since 1960. Would an India-wide ban lead to an exodus of the best journalistic minds?

Everything an Italian prime minister needs to know he learned in kindergarten:

"I learned from my mother that doing good deeds is the best way to elevate oneself," remarked Silvio Berlusconi, beginning his one year community service sentence in a home for elderly dementia patients.

European parliament elections from a UK perspective

Blimey! While the UK’s leaders quail before the rise of the UK Independence Parties, even the most affected average chaps seem indifferent.  The FT reports that there are 300,000 registered and 600,000 unregistered British citizens living in Spain, for a total of 900,000.  Only 16,000 are enrolled to vote in British elections.  Few seem aware of the May 25 election. According to a Brit in Annie's Irish Pub on the Spanish coast, “most people down here just want to get together and have a laugh.". 

Americans exit stage left, pursued by weird tax rules

American citizens are running away. In 2013, 2,999 Americans renounced their citizenship, up 211% from the previous record in 2011. The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act of 2010 (FATCA), now being phased in, not only makes it unadvisable for foreign banks to accept American taxpayers as customers (UBS, DB, etc. already don’t) even if the Americans in question are living abroad. Not only that, compliance is difficult for the 6 million Americans living abroad; those who can find banking services face onerous reporting requirements and criminal penalties for errors.

As for American corporations, will the US politicians’ opposition to Pfizer’s move to the UK prompt a rush for the exits? Ron Wyden, chairman of the Senate finance committee is threatening retroactive legislation to prevent this. It would certainly be prudent for multinational corporations to get while the getting is good.

The government seems to assume that no one has any legitimate reason to be abroad, nor to do business there. The concept of globalization is foreign to them.

We fear death, so we focus on the present


Saturday, May 10, 2014

People are revoltng in Europe

Of the EU's six original members, three are expected to see "populist or far-right parties" (are they the same thing?) finish first or second in the upcoming European Parliament elections.  These three are France, Netherlands, and Italy.

Irish (CPAs') eyes are smiling

From today’s FT.  Any comment would be superfluous, except that Irish eyes are smiling, along with those in Germany and Canada.