- 2016.09.16, 11:55
- "About 30% of global foreign direct investment (FDI) flows through tax havens; big companies routinely use “transfer pricing” to pretend that profits generated in one part of the world are in fact made in another. The giants also deploy huge armies of lobbyists, bringing the same techniques to Brussels, where 30,000 lobbyists now walk the corridors, that they perfected in Washington, DC. Laws such as Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank, to say nothing of America’s tax code, penalise small firms more than large ones.
"[...] Paying tax seems to be unavoidable for individuals but optional for firms. Rules are unbending for citizens, and up for negotiation when it comes to companies. Nor do profits translate into jobs as once they did. In 1990 the top three carmakers in Detroit had a market capitalisation of $36 billion and 1.2m employees. In 2014 the top three firms in Silicon Valley, with a market capitalisation of over $1 trillion, had only 137,000 employees."
Cilvēki kas baidās no UBI, pirmām kārtām iebrēcas: "ja visiem būs garantētais ienākums, kas tad vispār strādās?". bet UBI taču atbilde ir tieši jautājumam, ko darīt ar situāciju, kad darba devējiem vairs nav vajadzības pēc darbiniekiem vispār! - 3 rakstair doma