SurfWax News Index  |  Track News  |  Save/Exchange Information |  About Us

    News and Articles on Corporation Taxes



    Wisconsin tax collections down  Oct 28, 2009
    Corporation taxes increased 9. 2 percent to $167. (Milwaukee Business Journal, WI)

    Campbell fears state budget gap may widen  Oct 24, 2009
    His proposal, with a 4,000-word prologue, would cut taxes - personal income taxes, the state sales tax and corporation taxes - by 10 percent, cut state spending by 10 percent and create a $10 billion rainy-day fund. He and Campbell will debate the matter Wednesday at Brandman University in Orange County, when they meet for their third debate. (San Francisco Chronicle -- Politics)

    EDITORIAL: This tax code revise isn't the way to go  Sep 18, 2009
    Poizner said if he is elected governor in 2010, he would cut all personal income tax rates by 10 percent, reduce sales and corporation taxes by 10 percent, and slash the capital gains tax in half. Poizner's campaign could not say how much his proposed cuts would cost the state each year. (Fresno Bee)

    State video gambling, lottery take down  Aug 11, 2009
    Those are the individual income taxes, property taxes, corporation taxes with the vehicle and oil severance taxes running neck-in-neck for fourth in 2009. But when all these other revenue sources are combined, they make up about 50 percent of the total, he said. (Missoulian, MT)

    On carbon taxes, Myanmar, Chevron in Ecuador, finance, MPs' expenses, guns  Jun 16, 2009
    Implementing a system of transnational carbon taxes is fanciful carbon taxes cannot be imposed across borders any more easily than, say, corporation taxes. A system of carbon markets is a realistic alternative. (The Economist)

    Another View: How the Golden State got tarnished  May 30, 2009
    Bank and corporation taxes have been steadily reduced. In the current recession, with state unemployment at 11 percent, tax revenue has fallen off a cliff. (Hanford Sentinal, CA)

    A nasty Brown mess  May 9, 2009
    During the boom, the British government became too dependent on financial services, raking in money from income taxes on bonuses, capital-gains taxes on rising share prices or corporation taxes on bank profits. One reason its deficit has risen so quickly is that those revenues have evaporated. (The Economist)




    Back to Taxes News

[ Terms Of Use | Privacy | About ]
©1998-2009 SurfWax, Inc.
All rights reserved. Patents pending.



Copyright SurfWax, Inc. 2009