-
The World Health Organization said raising excise taxes on alcohol and sweetened beverages is the most effective way to reduce consumption while generating revenue.
December 6 -
The Swiss city of Lugano started to accept cryptocurrencies for paying taxes, fines and all other invoices from the municipality.
December 6 -
The rules, which aren't finalized, include measures sought by environmentalists that would require hydrogen-production operations to be powered by wind, solar or other clean-power projects built within the last three years to qualify for a $3-per-kilogram credit.
December 5 -
Artificial intelligence will eliminate vast swaths of the repetitive, time-consuming tasks that typically filled up junior staffers' first few years on the job.
December 4 -
The Biden administration has discussed granting automakers a temporary reprieve from new rules poised to limit a consumer tax credit, a Michigan senator said Tuesday.
November 29 -
Deploying 1,400 tax collectors — touted by the government as "paramilitary trained" in order to discourage resistance — is the most aggressive in a long line of controversial steps to nearly double the government's revenue collection to a quarter of gross domestic product by 2030.
November 28 -
Due to soft market demand, raises will be prioritized for staff who have been promoted, and workers eligible for a bonus will receive one that's lower than in previous years.
November 27 -
Janet Truncale most recently was the regional MP for EY's financial services organization in the Americas.
November 16 -
Magazine Luiza's announcement of accounting "inconsistencies" deals another blow to companies that have struggled after the scandal that brought down Americanas.
November 15 -
The U.K. Supreme Court rejected lawyers' claims that London isn't the proper place for the Danish tax agency to bring its claim.
November 8 -
The bulk of the cuts will be aimed at the advisory division.
November 7 -
House Republicans would paid for aid to Israel by slashing funds for the Internal Revenue Service.
November 1 -
The Golden State is poised to fall well short of its budget forecasts as the recent stock market slump erodes the state's tax takings.
October 31 -
Internal auditors have found hundreds of referrals from other lawyers for Camp Lejeune and other cases were bogus, often based on doctored medical records and fictional reports of illness.
October 30 -
An investigation found significant flaws in accounting behind carbon credits from Zimbabwe-based Kariba.
October 27 -
Partners at the Ernst & Young in the U.K. saw their share of profits drop for the first time in three years as the Big Four face economic uncertainty.
October 27 -
Regulators are conducting tax audits and reviewing land use by Foxconn, the Taiwanese company that makes the vast majority of iPhones at factories in China.
October 23 -
The accounting firm will use artificial intelligence to consult on complex matters in tax, legal and human resources.
October 18 -
The telecommunications company replaced Deloitte as its auditor with KPMG International. The decision was questioned by shareholders.
October 16 -
The Council of Economic Advisers said a reduction in revenues from capital gains taxes has played a notable role in the widening deficit.
October 12



















