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Page 4 - வரி தங்குமிடம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Annabella Nezri • Producer, Kwassa Films - Industry Report: Produce - Co-Produce

Florence Hainaut and salepute, which was broadcast on RTBF and Arte, and, last but not least, Eve Duchemin’s first feature film Temps Mort (news), on which filming has only just wrapped. Nezri has been selected as one of the EFP’s Producers on the Move for 2021. (The article continues below - Commercial information) Cineuropa: Why and how did you become a producer? Annabella Nezri: I’d always been passionate about film, but I didn’t know the sector at all. I started out as an intern; it was so exhilarating being at the heart of the filmmaking process: the development phase, the sets, human relations, and then bringing the film to life… It was what I wanted to do! I love putting different talents together and facilitating synergies. The reason I created Kwassa Films was to make films I liked, obviously, but also to find new audiences; to make genre films, comedies, family films… It’s exciting producing different things and having to win over

Biden Seeks $80 Billion to Beef Up I R S Audits of High-Earners

Biden Seeks $80 Billion to Beef Up I.R.S. Audits of High-Earners The president’s “American Families Plan,” which he will detail this week, will be offset in part by a tax enforcement effort that administration officials believe will raise $700 billion over a decade. President Biden wants to pay for the plan by increasing the capital gains tax and the top marginal income tax rate.Credit.Al Drago for The New York Times April 27, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET WASHINGTON President Biden, in an effort to pay for his ambitious economic agenda, is expected to propose giving the Internal Revenue Service an extra $80 billion and more authority over the next 10 years to help crack down on tax evasion by high-earners and large corporations, according to two people familiar with the plan.

An Accidental Disclosure Exposes a $1 Billion Tax Fight With Bristol Myers

An Accidental Disclosure Exposes a $1 Billion Tax Fight With Bristol Myers The I.R.S. believes the American drugmaker used an abusive offshore scheme to avoid federal taxes. Dr. Giovanni Caforio, the chief of Bristol Myers Squibb, last year during a House committee hearing on drug prices.Credit.Pool photo by Greg Nash April 1, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET Almost nine years ago, Bristol Myers Squibb filed paperwork in Ireland to create a new offshore subsidiary. By moving Bristol Myers’s profits through the subsidiary, the American drugmaker could substantially reduce its U.S. tax bill. Years later, the Internal Revenue Service got wind of the arrangement, which it condemned as an “abusive” tax shelter. The move by Bristol Myers, the I.R.S. concluded, would cheat the United States out of about $1.4 billion in taxes.

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