Close X
Monday, October 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Obama Praises Treasury Steps To Deter 'Tax Inversions'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2016 11:44 AM
    WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is championing new federal steps designed to deter a corporate financial practice known as "tax inversions."
     
    Inversions happen when a big American company buys a smaller one and changes its paper address to another country. Obama calls it "insidious" and says companies do it to reduce their U.S. tax burden.
     
    Obama commented on Tuesday, one day after the Treasury Department announced a series of steps to make inversions less financially appealing.
     
    Obama says such loopholes make it harder to spend money to keep the economy strong. He also says they hurt the middle class because the lost revenue "has to be made up somewhere."
     
    He called on the Republican-controlled Congress to close the loophole for good.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victoria School District Worries New Homeless Shelter Puts Students At Risk

    Victoria School District Worries New Homeless Shelter Puts Students At Risk
    Piet Langstraat said the province and the City of Victoria must pay the estimated $44,000 for extra custodial staff and crossing guards needed to ensure everyone's safety at Central Middle School.

    Victoria School District Worries New Homeless Shelter Puts Students At Risk

    Classified Ad Seeking To Connect BC Woman With Father Who Doesn't Know She Exists

    Classified Ad Seeking To Connect BC Woman With Father Who Doesn't Know She Exists
    Toni Rempel is looking for a man named Gary who was in Regina on business in 1969.

    Classified Ad Seeking To Connect BC Woman With Father Who Doesn't Know She Exists

    Victoria's Courthouse Campers On Move To Shelter After Months Outside

    Victoria's Courthouse Campers On Move To Shelter After Months Outside
    Wet, cold and windy nights adjusting tarps and pounding pegs into the soggy ground are about to come to an end for John Bertrim and dozens of others who have slept in tents on the Victoria Law Courts' lawn for months.

    Victoria's Courthouse Campers On Move To Shelter After Months Outside

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie
    Courtroom scheduling matters have delayed the case of 37-year-old Kenneth Knutson, who is set to return to court on Jan. 18.

    Trial Date Expected To Be Set For Man Charged With Shooting B.C. Mountie

    Air Canada Asks Top Court To Reject Maintenance Ruling In Quebec Lawsuit Fight

    MONTREAL — Air Canada has asked the Supreme Court to intervene to overturn a court ruling that requires the carrier to keep maintenance operations in the country.

    Air Canada Asks Top Court To Reject Maintenance Ruling In Quebec Lawsuit Fight

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate
    George Elliott Clarke, a much-honoured Nova Scotia writer, has been named the country's seventh parliamentary poet laureate.

    Nova Scotia Writer George Elliott Clarke Named New Parliamentary Poet Laureate