An E-commerce platform has approached the Delhi High court challenging the order issued by the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) imposing a penalty of Rs one lakh for selling pressure cookers without the Bureau of Indian Standard (BIS) mark.
corporations and individuals who can afford to pay fancy tax attorneys to help fine finagle the system. and they could recoup 400 billion a year. does that not match up to you? do you have different numbers? >> well, gillian, 80% of all the irs agents audits go to people making less than $50,000 a year, and so, i don't know where that amount is coming from. i know that the real math says that these attorneys and these c.p.a.'s, they're taking-- they're taking the tax code that's written for all people, and they're taking the reductions that are already there. the irs focuses on individuals who may not have the same capability because they're doing the taxes themselves and that's why they continue to go back and audit them. this is a tax on every single american out there. and let's not think about the
live in atlanta at a chain restaurant. hey, jonathan. >> hey. the owner of this restaurant in a previous life was in the accounting industry. then he decided to try something new. we're finding out folks lime him are in good company. restaurant franchises have a taste for expansion despite the economic down turn. the trend is especially hot in atlanta. >> i believe it's a hot bed for franchising because it's not a pedestrian city, because it is a commuter city, people are in their cars, they're going home on the way to work, they understand established brands, which franchising is all about. >> established restaurant brands provide a less risky alternative to the high failure rate of new start-ups. they're appealing to those new to the industry. >> i'm seeing a lot of the franchiseees are former cpa's, former attorneys, people who work for bigger companies that have been downsized. a lot of these people got good