851 resultados para tax benefits
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En la Provincia de San Luis existen 400.000 hectáreas activas de superficie cultivable con un potencial de 700.000 hectáreas. Los cultivos preponderantes son las oleaginosas, principalmente soja, maíz y girasol. En los últimos años, la provincia se expandió tanto en agricultura como en ganadería: en 2010 el sector ganadería creció un 7; por su parte, la agricultura se encuentra en una transición importante gracias a que los productores han incorporado tecnología que permite el crecimiento en una provincia con un clima muy diferente al de la pampa húmeda. La conjunción de esta circunstancia y de la realización de obras públicas provoca un sinergismo que ha llevado a la expansión del sector productivo. En la cadena de productos agroindustriales, uno de los eslabones principales para agregar valor en origen es la industrialización, con vistas a la posterior comercialización tanto del producto obtenido como de los subproductos. En San Luis se dan las dos situaciones: la venta de granos sin procesar y la de productos y subproductos obtenidos a partir de los granos y las oleaginosas. Como consecuencia de los beneficios impositivos con los cuales cuenta la provincia, que se suman a la ventaja de su localización en el corredor bioceánico, la radicación industrial fue más importante que en otras provincias. Del total de este sector en San Luis, las industrias alimentarías representan el 8 (29 empresas), entre las cuales se encuentran empresas que utilizan como materia prima la soja y el maíz. El objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar datos de mercado de la soja y del maíz a nivel mundial, nacional y provincial y estudiar el eslabón de industrialización en la cadena de valor de dichas oleaginosas en la Provincia de San Luis. Para ello, se realizaron entrevistas a informantes clave del sector industrial, búsqueda bibliográfica, lectura de papers, asistencia a exposiciones de la agroindustria, validación de información obtenida a partir de páginas web y recopilación de datos del Ministerio de Economía de la Nación y de la Dirección Provincial de Estadística y Censos
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En la Provincia de San Luis existen 400.000 hectáreas activas de superficie cultivable con un potencial de 700.000 hectáreas. Los cultivos preponderantes son las oleaginosas, principalmente soja, maíz y girasol. En los últimos años, la provincia se expandió tanto en agricultura como en ganadería: en 2010 el sector ganadería creció un 7; por su parte, la agricultura se encuentra en una transición importante gracias a que los productores han incorporado tecnología que permite el crecimiento en una provincia con un clima muy diferente al de la pampa húmeda. La conjunción de esta circunstancia y de la realización de obras públicas provoca un sinergismo que ha llevado a la expansión del sector productivo. En la cadena de productos agroindustriales, uno de los eslabones principales para agregar valor en origen es la industrialización, con vistas a la posterior comercialización tanto del producto obtenido como de los subproductos. En San Luis se dan las dos situaciones: la venta de granos sin procesar y la de productos y subproductos obtenidos a partir de los granos y las oleaginosas. Como consecuencia de los beneficios impositivos con los cuales cuenta la provincia, que se suman a la ventaja de su localización en el corredor bioceánico, la radicación industrial fue más importante que en otras provincias. Del total de este sector en San Luis, las industrias alimentarías representan el 8 (29 empresas), entre las cuales se encuentran empresas que utilizan como materia prima la soja y el maíz. El objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar datos de mercado de la soja y del maíz a nivel mundial, nacional y provincial y estudiar el eslabón de industrialización en la cadena de valor de dichas oleaginosas en la Provincia de San Luis. Para ello, se realizaron entrevistas a informantes clave del sector industrial, búsqueda bibliográfica, lectura de papers, asistencia a exposiciones de la agroindustria, validación de información obtenida a partir de páginas web y recopilación de datos del Ministerio de Economía de la Nación y de la Dirección Provincial de Estadística y Censos
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En la Provincia de San Luis existen 400.000 hectáreas activas de superficie cultivable con un potencial de 700.000 hectáreas. Los cultivos preponderantes son las oleaginosas, principalmente soja, maíz y girasol. En los últimos años, la provincia se expandió tanto en agricultura como en ganadería: en 2010 el sector ganadería creció un 7; por su parte, la agricultura se encuentra en una transición importante gracias a que los productores han incorporado tecnología que permite el crecimiento en una provincia con un clima muy diferente al de la pampa húmeda. La conjunción de esta circunstancia y de la realización de obras públicas provoca un sinergismo que ha llevado a la expansión del sector productivo. En la cadena de productos agroindustriales, uno de los eslabones principales para agregar valor en origen es la industrialización, con vistas a la posterior comercialización tanto del producto obtenido como de los subproductos. En San Luis se dan las dos situaciones: la venta de granos sin procesar y la de productos y subproductos obtenidos a partir de los granos y las oleaginosas. Como consecuencia de los beneficios impositivos con los cuales cuenta la provincia, que se suman a la ventaja de su localización en el corredor bioceánico, la radicación industrial fue más importante que en otras provincias. Del total de este sector en San Luis, las industrias alimentarías representan el 8 (29 empresas), entre las cuales se encuentran empresas que utilizan como materia prima la soja y el maíz. El objetivo del presente trabajo es presentar datos de mercado de la soja y del maíz a nivel mundial, nacional y provincial y estudiar el eslabón de industrialización en la cadena de valor de dichas oleaginosas en la Provincia de San Luis. Para ello, se realizaron entrevistas a informantes clave del sector industrial, búsqueda bibliográfica, lectura de papers, asistencia a exposiciones de la agroindustria, validación de información obtenida a partir de páginas web y recopilación de datos del Ministerio de Economía de la Nación y de la Dirección Provincial de Estadística y Censos
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Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc.
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A user's guide designed to accompany a video of the same title, produced by Counsel Technical Communications.
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Tese de Doutoramento em Contabilidade.
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This report documents the Iowa Department of Transportation's accomplishments and ongoing efforts in response to 39 recommendations proposed by the Governor's Blue Ribbon Transportation Task Force at the end of 1995. Governor Terry Branstad challenged the Task Force to "maximize the benefits of each dollar spent from the Road Use Tax Fund."
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This paper studies the effects of increasing formality via tax reduction and simplification schemes on micro-firm performance. It uses the 1997 Brazilian SIMPLES program. We develop a simple theoretical model to show that SIMPLES has an impact only on a segment of the micro-firm population, for which the effect of formality on firm performance can be identified, and that can be analyzed along the single dimensional quantiles of the conditional firm revenues. To estimate the effect of formality, we use an econometric approach that compares eligible and non-eligible firms, born before and after SIMPLES in a local interval about the introduction of SIMPLES. We use an estimator that combines both quantile regression and the regression discontinuity identification strategy. The empirical results corroborate the positive effect of formality on microfirms' performance and produce a clear characterization of who benefits from these programs.
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Using a choice experiment survey this study examines the UK public's willingness to pay to conserve insect pollinators in relation to the levels of two pollination service benefits: maintaining local produce supplies and the aesthetic benefits of diverse wildflower assemblages. Willingness to pay was estimated using a Bayesian mixed logit with two contrasting controls for attribute non-attendance, exclusion and shrinkage. The results suggest that the UK public have an extremely strong preference to avoid a status quo scenario where pollinator populations and pollination services decline. Total willingness to pay was high and did not significantly vary between the two pollination service outputs, producing a conservative total of £379M over a sample of the tax-paying population of the UK, equivalent to £13.4 per UK taxpayer. Using a basic production function approach, the marginal value of pollination services to these attributes is also extrapolated. The study discusses the implications of these findings and directions for related future research into the non-market value of pollination and other ecosystem services.
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If household choices can be rationalized by the maximization of a well defined utility function, allowing spouses to file individually or jointly is equivalent to offering the envelope of the two tax schedules. If, instead, household ’preferences’ are constantly being redefined through bargaining, the option to file separately may affect outcomes even if it is never chosen. We use Lundberg and Pollak’s (1993) separate spheres bargaining model to assess the impact of filing options on the outcomes of primary and secondary earners. Threat points of the household’s bargain are given for each spouse by the utility that he or she attains as a follower of a counter-factual off-equilibrium Stackelberg game played by the couple. For a benchmark tax system which treats a couple’s average taxable income as if it were that of a single individual, we prove that if choices are not at kinks, allowing couples to choose whether to file jointly or individually usually benefits the secondary earner. In our numeric exercises this is also the case when choices are at kinks as well. These findings are, however, quite sensitive to the details of the tax system, as made evident by the examination of an alternative tax system.
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Even though the term corporate inversion has been heard globally for decades, it has only become more prevalent in the United States during the past two years. This case study examines two United States companies that recently had very high profile and public corporate inversion experiences. Complicated tax laws and high tax rales have long eroded the ability of United States companies to remain competitive on a global scale. During the past two years, tax reform has been elevated to the Presidential and Congressional levei. Because these reform efforts have stalled, however, and in the constant search for ways to become more competitive and profitable, United States dorniciled companies have begun to more aggressively explore corporate inversion. This case study of Walgreens Alliance Boots and Mylan N.V., is undertaken because while the reasons to pursue a corporate inversion for both companies were very similar and done during the same time period, the internai process and final outcome were dramatically different. The other dynamic studied is the role both internai and externai politics had on these two cornpanies and how they influenced the decisions made by the executives. Lastly, the Obama Administration continues to threaten so called "corporate America" to remain in the country through regulatory pressure, but this has not stopped companies frorn pursing corporate inversions. Legislatively, attempts at corporate tax reform, another way to encourage Untied States companies to remain, have also failed. I will not try to determine i f a corporate inversion is the right path for a company to take. I am examining how the rise o f the practice o f corporate inversions has been elevated in boardroorns, on Wall Street, in Congress and at the White House during the past two years.
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This paper uses a survey experiment to examine differences in public attitudes toward 'direct' and 'indirect' government spending. Federal social welfare spending in the USA has two components: the federal government spends money to directly provide social benefits to citizens, and also indirectly subsidizes the private provision of social benefits through tax expenditures. Though benefits provided through tax expenditures are considered spending for budgetary purposes, they differ from direct spending in several ways: in the mechanisms through which benefits are delivered to citizens, in how they distribute wealth across the income spectrum, and in the visibility of their policy consequences to the mass public. We develop and test a model explaining how these differences will affect public attitudes toward spending conducted through direct and indirect means. We find that support for otherwise identical social programs is generally higher when such programs are portrayed as being delivered through tax expenditures than when they are portrayed as being delivered by direct spending. In addition, support for tax expenditure programs which redistribute wealth upward drops when citizens are provided information about the redistributive effects. Both of these results are conditioned by partisanship, with the opinions of Republicans more sensitive to the mechanism through which benefits are delivered, and the opinions of Democrats more sensitive to information about their redistributive effects.
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Tax motivated takings are takings by a local government aimed purely at increasing its tax base. Such an action was justified by the Supreme Court's ruling in Kelo v. New London, which allowed the use of eminent domain for a private redevelopment project on the grounds that the project promised spillover public benefits in the form of jobs and taxes. This paper argues that tax motivated takings can lead to inefficient transfers of land for the simple reason that assessed values understate owners' true values. We therefore propose a reassessment scheme that greatly reduces the risk of this sort of inefficiency.
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Methods of tax collection employed by modern governments seem dull when compared to the rich variety observed in history. Whereas most governments today typically use salaried agents to collect taxes, various other types of contractual relationships have been observed in history, including sharing arrangements which divide the tax revenue between the government and collectors at fixed proportions, negotiated payment schemes based on the tax base, and sale of the revenue to a collector in exchange for a lump-sum payment determined at auction. We propose an economic theory of tax collection that can coherently explain the temporal and spatial variation in contractual forms. We begin by offering a simple classification of tax collection schemes observed in history. We then develop a general economic model of tax collection that specifies the cost and benefits of alternative schemes and identifies the conditions under which a government would choose one contractual form over another in maximizing the net revenue. Finally, we use the conclusions of the model to explain some of the well-known patterns of tax collection observed in history and how choices varied over time and space.
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"October 1992."