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tv   Cant Pay Wont Pay  Deutsche Welle  October 30, 2022 8:15pm-8:58pm CET

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and when a pedestrian bridge collapse, western india more than 400 people were on the suspension bridge or the much river at the time of the collapse rescue operations. there are currently underway. all right, how marital berlin and you're up to date so far up next is our technology show shift, which takes a look at how 3 scans, drones and artificial intelligence can be used to create digital backups of monuments threatened by climate change. and remember, if you need more news, there's lots more on a website that's d, w dot com. and of course you could also check us out on social media where our tag is at g w. news. i'm here until in berlin. thanks for watching. ah ah, every journey is full of surprises. we've gone all out with. i'm in your
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northern most count please. ah, for a time in the one very much a line d w channel, you'll go to the special with recognizes where exactly. it was fun and i learned a lot of our culture history, all their d. w. travel extremely worth a visit with when will the leaning tower of pisa collette many world famous monuments are risk you to climate change war and negligence. but with the help of 3 d scans, drones and a i, we can save these eye clinic buildings, at least virtually how it works. that's our topic on ship today. ah.
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having digital backups comes in handy like of your diploma or your favorite. todos the same is true for historic buildings that have deteriorated over the years like mexico cities famous metropolitan cathedral, which has been damaged by several earthquakes. luckily it's 3 d model is earthquake proof. that's also a detailed 3 d model of the gateway of india and moon by which has been eroded by sea water. but it's estimated at so far, only about 15 percent of the world's casual heritage has been digitally preserved by now. ukraine's cause will have it. it is especially at risk, it's not only buildings and gods as that in danger, but all kinds of online archives of things like paintings and lid, which are to me in ukraine. russian bombs are not only killing people and estimating homes and infrastructure. they're destroying cultural heritage too.
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right now everything's at risk. everything from physical museum collections to records of library holdings, to servers with websites. at the end of the day, the internet is as physical as, as anything else that depends on servers that have to be connected to power and connected to cables. and those servers are at risk of being destroyed. if servers are destroyed, digital backups of art and other records their last to that's why quin number ascii and a group of librarians researchers and programmers join forces to start suture saving ukrainian cultural heritage online. soon after the russian attack suture volunteers began archiving as much as possible, relying in what they could find from ukrainian cultural institutions online. we're trying to, to capture those websites with everything that's on them. any pdf,
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any image, any 3 d model or, or walkthrough. we're trying to capture a version of, of all of it so that, that can be, you know, something that is safe and outside the country. ah, some tech companies are supporting search by providing servers in storage for free . so far, the group has saved more than 30 terabytes of content from over 3500 websites. more than 1300 volunteers helped with the task. sometimes it's not even like a firefighter squad, it's, it's more like, you know, neighbors with water buckets. you know, many of us had not really done any work on web archiving before this year on quinn, dombrowski hope so, chose archive will never actually be needed. we, we don't actually want these to be useful if they're useful it's, it's a sign that something terrible has happened in terms of the preservation of, of cultural heritage. the great thing about this project, anyone can pitch him. you can learn more at social dot org. sometimes doing your
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part to digital to preserve cultural heritage is simple. other times more expertise is needed. ah, the great wall of china is the world's longest manmade structure. it's more than 20000 kilometers long. over 2000 years old and in desperate need of repair. droves are used to survey ports of the wall that are difficult to access. after filming the wall of close, the data is then used to create 3 d models. a i is then used to scan these models, identified the damage, and plug the necessary repairs. the non profits cy arc specializes in 3 d laser scans of endangered cultural sites. here's how it works. laser scanner sensors pulses of light through by measuring how long it takes for the lights to be reflected off various surfaces. it's possible to determine the size and surface
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material of objects. this method is called lighter. another technique that's used as photo grammar tree, where overlapping photos are combined to create extremely realistic 3 d models. anyone can check out the scans on google's arts and culture platform or download the datasets on open heritage. 3 d digital technology has become critical in reconstructing destroyed buildings. in august 2015, the temple of balcony and palmera serious was reduced to rubble by the islamic state. terrorist group, however, back in the 1950s, swiss archeologist to po colors, excavated undocumented, the temple. the information you collected back then made it's possible to create a virtual reality image and 3 d model,
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or the temple of bounce. yameen is supposed to be rebuilt, just like pun mirrors, arch of triumph, which was also destroyed by ins. using digital muddles. robots built a smaller replica of the archway which has been exhibited in several cities. hopefully, the arch of triumph can one day return to its original location in syria. in 2019 of fire destroyed large parts of the natural dom cathedral. the incident shot france and people worldwide businessmen, one of the most iconic landmarks in paris was lost forever. fortunately, not its cowardly being restored with the original thanks and part of this man, andrew tell him no tra, dom was a lifelong passion for andrew talon. here the belgian born art historian is walking around the 850 year old cathedral before the fire. he was recording
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a $360.00 degree video, which is why the image looks a bit distorted. mother, interesting detail to see about this is a bit of lead that was often used as a joint between edge bedded elements such as this talon used laser scanning technology to map no to them. he collected more than $1000000000.00 data points, which he then linked to photos of the scanned areas. andrew became fascinated with the cathedral from a very young age. his work there in trying to create a global laser survey. that is really what makes his work stand out there. so we are still reading the benefits of that effort from 2010 in 2012. he scans not as much as i'm, you know, but it does, since it's not hundreds of cathedrals from sweden to spain not turned on was i think, a crown jewel on a lot of ways. and andrew talon did not live to see exactly how important his scans
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would turn out to be several months before the fire destroyed notre dams. roof inspire, he died of cancer. part of the reconstruction plan is based on talent work. it is one of several records that we have of the pre fire state of neutral. and this is of course, critically important as the decision was made to restore the building identical, you know, to damage restoration, teen combine talents, models with additional scans resulting in this impressive 3 d model. us square developer, autodesk provides a cloud based data platform, which gives all the stakeholders involved in reconstruction, access to the latest records that makes it easier to plan construction, work like calculating how many oak trees need to be felled to replace notre dame's fire. frances,
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determined to restore the cathedral true to its original design, the one that andrew talon and his team mapped before the fire, thus safeguarding its future. there are many ways in which cultural heritage can be endangered. one prominent example art stolen by colonizers, the kenya based non profit, african digital heritage, is working to digitize these treasures. and we frame how this history is documented . yet another advantage of digital copies, cultural heritage can be showcase to a global audience online. ah, artifacts from african history? ideally, you might see them in person in the museum collection, but kenyan historian chow tianna minor. once more world wide accessibility, we decide for many reasons, one of the primary ones being access,
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enabling audiences practitioners be such as to access material remotely to access material from different countries. you know, you don't have to be in kenya to access cultural heritage. another reason why we digitize is to preserve the material the digital heritage specialist trains museum staff across kenya. the teams have a huge task ahead of them, digitizing tens of thousands of books, papers, and photos. some of them hundreds of years old. i lot of the time when i'm training on digitization, i would say read the process of digitization is not about just sticking the photograph. it's about the decisions that you make before you take this photograph . the 1st step is inspection and selection. not everything can be digitized choosing the right to objects is also
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a way of writing history. high profits which have held some emerging markets prospect. mm. and allowed developing countries to come industrialized and grow. a comment also has drawbacks. she does, and especially when it comes to taxes at that moment, jeffrey sachs, i eggs now clear, almost dominant, raw hip on the weakening capital taxation, not feebly. it deprives countries of any ability to collect that taxes that get that regardless of the social market is on book, is that what they can gwen models was held to check the on january 1st, 2002, the euro was launched. one single currency which immediately facilitated the free movement of capital, with the exception of britain, which didn't adopt the euro member states gave up the prerogative of controlling their own currency. but within the common market, no provisions were made for protecting member countries. text systems, locals, so it will be n s. ed. okay, do something for new? the construction of the european union should have been accompanied by social and
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fiscal legislation. that did not happen them, work was only done on trade regulations to combat estate monopolies if will, and remove restrictions on the movement of goods vote, no thought at all was given to the impact this might have on corporate structures law. but if a company has a space thick in which it can move freely and can locate its production in a country where employees cost less and there are fewer social security contributions and non wage labor costs e m want, then it will set up its production. there are there that if there are no taxes on intellectual property in another country, if that's a bits holding company, they're presented as a result in the e. u has created a new set of structures for corporations, all including internationally, operating french corporation. we'll, we'll p complete the whole process and at the last minute to keep friends attractive to its own professionals. the government began granting special fiscal dispensations. this led to
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a boon in tax exemptions. ah, liberality to belong to present, present pre, so true to fit, do all assertions are becoming increasingly powerless due to the strong influence of you legislation. one of the few ways to respond to the demand for tax cuts i did is to give tax. great. notice it's easy to do that if it's just passively deep and that there has been down. god dickens, there is a political tool to serve tax cutting interests. the problem, unfortunately category is that only a few benefit result isn't that the general public kiki does not benefit? if you are gonna diligence higher, sissy stay, systems are very complex and lead to great justices lives. understand how tax expenditure amounts to a $100000000000.00 euros. so me as one parliamentarian put it in a nutshell, me about behind every tax li park looks a dog l. yoshio the old principle of fair taxation, a legacy of the french revolution began to disappear. meanwhile,
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the quest attacks optimization opened up new horizons for some leg blacks. ellison hug multi in the rules, are complicated to you. they are varies, and the are global at the same time do accordingly. and there are many who take advantage of the situation. this is legal means assume they are not tax of eaters will fill up the tax optimizations of the only ensures that they pay as little tax as possible to equity. they basically just make use of what the legal framework as a liar look at, met the defense the tax optimization of large corporations had a direct impact on the people who have old g 8 and g. 20 countries support multinational corporations playing labor markets off against each other, the global north against the south. the sa lane remaining competitive in germany with the unemployment rate after reunification was 12 percent. chancellor schroeder government introduced measures targeting unemployment benefits and labor
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costs. when in 2005, the hots for reforms were announced, the middle class understood it to could be threatened with poverty the only hip at all for the hubs. few of our mission, d, for the of its laws. the real threats of hearts fought was not for the unemployed ation. rather, the threat lane consequences for the labor market to such sheely floors as a result of halts for a low wage. checks were established itself in germany, and especially in saxony. i'm holly glad the strategy of the state government at the time belief was to sell saxony on halt, low wage state. look here, people work here for less money to get. we then have hourly wages here are full euro 6 euros zix. these were considered completely normal for that was the real consequence of hans for govern huttfield of as he spread in saxony. unhealthy wiping out the last vestiges of the east gym in social model. the reduction of
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labor costs had the poor 1st dish near the dodge, the child, and morgan. i did not only the german social democracy. startled social cost is a crete the skin. it also applies to the party socially into, in other words, the social democratic party in frock is in our field. it is just as true of the spanish socialist workers party humanist. it is also true of the italian communist, whoever you look, arden's monday, at one point they fallen for the dilution of neo liberalism or damage and thus abandoned the thinking of the social democrats and socialists of game, ah, with the decline of social democracy. the idea of using taxation to redistribute wealth and thus reduced in a qualities, was gradually fading. in 2005 europeans were asked to vote on common european constitution. vote is in denmark, the netherlands and france rejected it,
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ah, new se. but what is the people's vote worth when the market is focused on the movement of goods and capital belly? 2 years later, the treaty of lisbon was signed a near copy of the treated that was rejected by voters. this fudging of the democratic process would have consequences by 2019 the yellow vests were convinced that representative democracy wasn't really working. a vote on a new e u. treaty that is inclusive and most importantly does not distort the outcome of the vote. a new constitution that also allows for referendums, no more invisible nps, they should talk with the citizens, one term only abolish the constitutional monarchy. the yellow vests revived
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political debate from crisis to crisis. the link between taxation and politics became more and more clear. the financial crisis of 2 my declare that there is globalization without regulation. rather, there is globalization, thanks to directional good. as i deregulation had arousing effect on markets, starting with the real estate market in the 2 thousands banks with the backing of the government's drove citizens into debt for home ownership, with adjustable rate mortgages. as the number of loans exploded, interest rates rows benefiting the banks and the market, but hurting debtors. homeowners who could no longer afford their mortgages in 2000 and night. the number of people defaulting on their payments, multiplied triggering the worldwide subprime financial crisis. the entire banking system was on the brink government's rush to save the banks, keeping them afloat,
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the public money, much of what remained of countries welfare states were sacrificed to say the banker's britain was at the forefront of bailing out their financial institutions. some of the most powerful in the world don't estimate the welfare state. they change in participation. this is exactly what george osborne, the tory chancellor was planning with. this is 30 program. it was a big moment. my 1st budget standing there. i was a little nervous and i also knew i had to announce and rather surprised the country that we were going to do a whole set of difficult things like raise the retirement age for people, hold public sector, pay the pay of the nurses and the teachers flat increase the taxes that some very rich people paid. all these things that were not easy to announce. and i think people were expecting me to do it in many different announcements over several
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years. and i did it in one go. when he came to debt reduction in germany, the approach was strict finance. mister miller can show bella was following the same course as george osborne mia liberalism was on the rise at the expense of the most vulnerable order and up to the door. how did one of the federal government mastered the crisis? well, thanks to some great economic achievement closer, but with the use of parts i'm work program through many investment aids on many investment programs. examinable as well as with incentives for consumption and investments for social security, obsolete. we mastered the crisis. good demise them with wolf can show a blur in charge of germany's finances is 0 deficit concept was set in stone, a strictly balanced budget mechanism to put the brakes on debt became part of the german constitution for a decade. it was represented visually with a debt clock is a shouldn't, was ends on board of her. that's mon b, which after july,
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those fish's debt clock is more of a symbol of the importance of balancing economic performance for a tax burden of citizens. and the behavior of society with food and the death clock is based on the idea that you shouldn't get into excessive debt. that's money that you always have to make sure that i can repay the debt you take on asthma, the op a demon can. these read numbers symbolizes the political action is implemented in financial policy as political news institute. above all, the clock symbolizes the gym and tax credo, of the last decade, which you spending at all costs. in france, nicholas suckers, these government chose not to focus on reducing debt, deciding instead to bail out the banks and the rich. the finance mystery came up with the tax reform that limited the tax paid by the wealthiest introducing a tax cap said at 50 percent of their income, valuable drug, mortishaw, just imaging. that wouldn't come of it with forced into of systematically raising
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it is a bad solution with a finance minister must find other ways to pack them up properly to do so. he must be able to generate enough political strength to avoid an excess of public love. your metal and allow the country to take another pas. democracy must be efficient with the citizens money. if a company or household pays to much tax minute than that money does not flow until the private sector. the money then does not benefit the economy and does not enable wealth to increased on to be passed on to one's children. individuals can no longer freely dispose of the money that i have, i believe are for the non profit and aurora can i give you this tax cap when hand in hand with the reduction in social spending prescribed by the austerity policies imposed on the entire european union a growing number of people was slipping into poverty. so workers endured austerity, they endured, restrain pay, reduce public services for on the other hand,
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there were these massive subsidies going to the financial sector. say you have this rarely peculiar world that in an obscene world, really where the workers are punished when they didn't cause the crisis and finance is rewarded. and it did quote, cost across system to offset these policies favoring the wealthiest and demonstrate that the rich would have to contribute as well. each member states supported an initiative to rein in tax havens launched by the o. e. c. d. now is on follicle on dom enough on that you see a microphone took a success in 2009, the dressing tax evasion in switzerland, luxembourg, singapore, hong kong, with cayman islands. bermuda, okay. i could list 50 more countries. let me put it was due to a strong political dynamic triggered by the shock banking crisis. if you go the only palette what to put leggers or is all the country bizarre, where the govern by right wing is all left wing itself. we can't give billions of
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bureaus to bail out blank wall street, and at the same time, watch these banks help people not pay their taxes. are taxable asian it up or now to the z. last remarks that so the g 20 was supposed to make a list of which countries at my progress since 1990 active, if in which i'm not is that nicotine is lupita premier. the fur is okay. buffy program for a 3 the model want her to pres for switzerland to me. friday, march 13th, 29. was looking back at a very important data on them. that was when our governmental, the swiss federal council, if a press conference and announced that from now on switzerland we comply with the we c d standard. the put the theme as article $26.00 of the model tax convention for the avoidance of double taxation that that event. this article says is that the states must exchange information and tax matters is good and importantly, to cannot invoke banking secrecy. a circumvent exchange. the question back in may 2015 very soon after the douglas switzerland even went so far as to see that we now
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also accept the standard of an automatic exchange of information. automatic johnson m. like i fire field when there are ways to create a tax haven close to home. simple glue as companies with tax advantages. ah eat it and no matter could in me. quita or sandra. it is not normal for small states in europe to divert billions of euros in tax revenue from other state, which in turn provide the human capital and expertise for europe, who trains the people who then work in these taxi events in equally, not only are these small states diverting tax revenue, but they are also not compensating at an e u level for the assets they have stolen to the 20 tex rivalry within the european union created a tense in balance. after the 2008 financial crisis, the banks was stronger than ever, and the rich just kept getting richer people felt cheated. populism was on the
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right thing, came a harsh blow for the you breaks it in 2016, the british government put membership in the e. u to a vote remain is faced off would leave it. the latter persuaded voters that the interview was to blame for the dismantling of the welfare state, which had actually been decline since margaret thatcher time. one of the things that i owe the leave people come by and dawn was this idea. the 350000000 pounds a week to be spent on the, in a chess instead of going to brussels. they worked at some spurious figure, although actually a lot of the money we gave to bruce brussels or was given to brussels in tax, was actually given back through european structural fun. on june 23rd 2016, a majority voted in favor of briggs. it the northeast of england,
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formerly a labor stronghold, had tipped, the scales, ah, ah, gemini, was also still divided. 30 years after re unification. there was still aussies and vessels. ah. this divide plate into the hands of the ifd, the right when populous alternative, the germany party, ah, family dirge, la d ifd on the ifd is in a star touch dogger. we have the ifd in germany, stacia dylan. the a estie is stronger in eastern germany. the ifd, but not because people in east germany more susceptible to the f d. it's because then when people feel that they are socially excluded, ya'll ask
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a grand send their wages along to send the sierra renton to the pensions. and oh, good. that's in the overall of their living conditions are not good, but then to put a protest, her thursdays, which are, that is social inequality is of the root of the i is the success in the through the motor ifd a few foreigners combined with the dissatisfaction with texas, and suddenly the a f t rose in popularity. the movement carried a tone similar to that of the briggs at 1st in the u. k. and was particularly strong in disadvantaged parts of the country. in france, it was the increase in the carbon tax in 2018 which highlighted the country's divide. those he relied on cars, started protesting. it was the beginning of the yellow vest movement. his political agenda would grow to include other grievances as well, which it is on this young kid,
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cassandra not however discolored in that yellow versus, or a kind of tax reporting them. it's a reaction to an increase in taxes which is seen as unfair. why a portion of the population really it goes on in an environment with a very high tax per, is in low satisfaction, where the state visibility, such overheated reactions occur. we have, as we know from the yellow version decision, lots of that, that's of the 1st attack on top of tax on top of tax. that was probably the straw that broke the camel's back. so there was already rumbling before that. i didn't take to the streets because of the carbon tax, but because of the ela vos yes. and they saw, but i think many at home were waiting angrily in front of their computers for it. i've been ranting for ages and thinking when will it all explode? alphabet, ah ah,
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desperation mobilized the people and is dangerous to restore fiscal justice, we must meet capitalism were moral or destroyed enough with the tax cuts. why not a basic income, especially for young people aged $16.00 to $25.00, strengthen the civil service, close tax loopholes they are privileged for the rich. i thought i had a to say one of the pill attend, declined the head. is it where you took the trouble to hold discussions in the citizens me any way anyone could come and speak dorian and well, all complaints john, even the controversial ones because they were, they were noted and passed on me. but at the community me 2 year old people called very angry thought because the only answers they got a hair worth and i normally there was no police violence. now no tear gas was used . no one was beep enough or was it? but that was justified or whom what you're asking for. i'm afraid there's nothing we can do. we spend too much as it is overlap of them. it logically follows. to
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take matters into one's own hands and get more control of politics. it ultimately lemme, these people are demanding more democracy and another prisoner democracy. i convinced that they were not being heard, the yellow vests mobilized for almost to hear the cause as if their anger were multiple, sometimes contradictory. their principal demands were to gain some control in how they were taxed for their grievances to be taken seriously. began states which have less and less control over taxation even do that. luscious, getty? cedric eldric, elderly went it. oh tac. lemuel is the lynchpin of sovereignty, as we've already shown that all there is no sovereignty without the pirate attack as dividend of him. that was true from the middle ages of until the 20th century. if you know we are experiencing a globalization, in addition regard to the sticker of the new characteristics of economy, only lending mill is a kind of digitalization of the economy,
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2 ribs and he no longer correspond to the characteristics of traditional economic activities, economic you with it every day, we're exactly this or that multinational companies based today is difficult to say well, and since it is not known exactly, a good bus you want is also not known where the ship attack was improved. oh, politics. it took legislature. this is the whole difficulty in taxing companies today to be able to localize their value creation process law class from recess. after the industrial revolution, the digital revolution created a new way of accumulating wealth. a group of american tech giants with caching in with hefty prophets and dominating the west's digital market. unchallenged coverage is a good fit in russia. when you use google and type something into the search engine,
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if you pay nothing, it's free. local, please. and again, as of course, that doesn't mean the company doesn't make money because it does that by selling data. but they took, my definition isn't tangible and they got one of the big challenges in taxation today is also to capture values that traditionally cannot be captured, that it won't come back up to hit additional ready filled it up. the challenge is gigantic unless it is really about sovereignty. hipaa, if we do not manage the state such as france, which have a high level of tax, revenue will be in great difficulty in yes, but then there is the risk of this tax revenue will slip away from their territory and will be missing from the revenue lock, and as a result, they don't, there will be great difficulty in financing public services. i mean tinning the economic mafioso, so it's bi weekly dominant to meet this new challenge, the o e. c. d, which represents 40 of the wealthiest countries, came up with a new global tax to try to regulate economies. as they do have acer at
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daily defeat, the only c d that is working to address these challenges for business is all about the new better hag. new rules are designed to allow countries to continue to levy their own tax loss with the thought that add a global view that issues. so there is a lot of money at stake to live as your she scheduled in terms of tax evasion. by multinational world monumental non us on to we're talking about around $3400000000000.00 euros a year. well it while on the roman yet is see if williams introduce a global minimum tax very quickly. mom, mom, yell it yelp where you can raise at least a $150000000000.00 euro on top of current tax revenues. he says, you play or said she's character and i think it's fantastic that we have had a shift and thinking and the o e. c. d has done all this work to develop a new model of corporate taxation, which says companies have an obligation to the communities in which they operate and they should pay tax where they operate and where they met their sales. and that
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there should be some minimum floor of global taxation so that countries are not competing with each other in a race to the bottom. see said the coil of diekama, the sweat, all know hard. if this agreement to the doctor, as we would like a car and omit until for the 1st time and have an instrument with which to put an end to the harmful practices of tax havens, i'm simply put thought no state will be forced to increase its tax rate, altamont, this will put it with the agreement, gives others the right to tax it very heavily if it does not exist in guilford. so we have here a very powerful instrument you to put an end to one of the most harmful practices of the last 2 decades. who did any of the c, m are almost her 28. this is probably the biggest tax reform in a 100 years years appears hic. ah. meanwhile, amazon, google and others like them is still slipping through the net. the year 2020 only made them richer. the tech giant prospered through the pandemic,
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to the detriment and the climate tax justice and small shopkeepers. ah, the pandemic muted the yellow this movement, while highlighting the shortcomings of neo liberalism. it became clear that the welfare state had severely declined. and national health systems damaged as they were by decades of austerity, couldn't handle the so now me of disease. the world had to press pause. governments were forced to spend on a massive scale to keep their economies afloat. ah, the you had to borrow heavily to proper member states economies. the curve as crisis is extremely interesting because it has led to once again, a huge increase in expenditure, leading to debt to g d p ratio. nearing in the developed world around
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a 120 percent, so we're not still still quite not reaching so the you know, the 150 percent of the 1st world war not to mentioned the 250 percent of the napoleon it was. and 2nd world war, but it's still a very substantial amount of debt. and i think there is a lot of questioning at the moment as to well i, we will sort of do a repeat of what happened after 272008. when his debt, there must be taxation. the political choices of countries after the pandemic will prove decisive. what will follow after 50 years of neoliberalism, that has stripped the tech system of its power, but have only mazin or was killing. and then let us see whether it will be possible to reduce this inequality a greater extent off to the pandemic. notice, i'm not sure yet because economic concentration is increase at diekama power has
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become more more concentrated in the hands of a few large companies, all of which are caused lawyer do not want taxes to change the through and welfare states to improve when it's on the diving the books are now open, were dominion dismissed on, oh, we have certainly reached the turning point. so we can look at this one has some mystically so you can see that things have tended to get worse of the last 30 or 40 years lisa. but we could also see that the last you chrisy p, a financial crisis of 28. nathan and the pandemic we've been experiencing since 2020 was a process about a real change and turn states priorities and views on tax issues arise with no major fiscal, but sort of taxation will people accept in the future will to be a tank. so digital data traffic on the 21st century will we tax the worth of robots? these kinds of questions will catch up with all protest movements sooner or later.
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at its heart, lie to simple questions unchanged since the middle ages. where does my tax money go? and what kind of a society does it help to construct? mm ah ah
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a long mediterranean voyage comes to an end. the final destination morocco. xena on that's right, shows bellow presenter just far, abdul karim the country of her ancestors both agreed that diversity is the region true source of well being. 30 minutes on d. w. o . people in trucks injured when trying to see the city center more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families playing phone tags seems syria to the credit on its way.
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located demonstrate people's lean, extreme drought, ross getting 200 people with around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. ask why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. w. made for mines. ah, ah ah.
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there's a dw news line from berlin, a bridge collapse from western india least dozens dead, more than a 100 plunged into the mantra river when the pedestrian bridge gave way. restorations are underway. also coming up, brazilians go to the poles to choose a president for right and coverage, or you're both narrow hopes to remain in office. but his rival left is louisa not you.

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