Euros & Dollars: Bad Timing for Lithuania’s Tax Hikes

Euros & Dollars: Bad Timing for Lithuania's Tax Hikes

The Lithuanian Finance Ministry proposed increasing the corporate tax rate by one percentage point, hiking excise duty on fuel, and introducing a tax on some insurance contracts to raise additional funds for defense.

Case remains for BoE to start cutting rates

Case remains for BoE to start cutting rates

The CEO of a financial advisory firm believes that the Bank of England should start cutting interest rates this summer despite UK inflation data showing mixed signals.

FACTBOX-Key issues for South African voters in wide open 2024 election

FACTBOX-Key issues for South African voters in wide open 2024 election

South Africans will vote in a national election on May 29 with uncertainty about the outcome, as polls suggest the African National Congress may lose its majority after 30 years in power. Key issues include high unemployment rates, sluggish economic growth, power cuts, corruption scandals, high rates of violent crime, and rising anti-immigrant sentiment. The government is working to address these issues, with a focus on job creation, economic growth, and tightening immigration laws.

Democrats Should Stop Pushing a Higher Corporate Tax Rate

Democrats Should Stop Pushing a Higher Corporate Tax Rate

President Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders are advocating for raising the corporate tax rate to help working families, but economic research shows that this would actually harm working people. Studies have shown that a higher corporate tax rate leads to lower wages, higher prices, and reduced retirement savings for everyday Americans. The 2017 tax cuts resulted in benefits for working people, including lower unemployment rates and increased wages. Increasing the corporate tax rate would also lead to higher taxes on pensions and retirement savings for many Americans. Experts agree that raising the corporate tax rate is the most economically harmful tax increase, hurting investment, growth, productivity, workers, consumers, and savers.

Turkish Cypriot economy is not the worst in its history

Turkish Cypriot economy is not the worst in its history

Fact: Unemployment in Turkish Cyprus fell to 5.1 per cent in 2023, the lowest level since 2004, and the economy experienced a growth of 13.3 per cent in 2022, the fastest pace since the post-Annan Plan referendum period.