Sunday, 17 December 2017

Pemberhentian kakitangan MAS: Penjelasan sudah memadai

KUALA LUMPUR: Kementerian Sumber Manusia, hari ini, tampil membuat penjelasan berhubung isu pemberhentian kerja 3,600 kakitangan kesatuan sekerja Penerbangan Malaysia (MAS) berikutan pelan penyusunan semula syarikat penerbangan nasional itu.
Menterinya, Datuk Seri Richard Riot, berkata pihaknya menerusi Jabatan Perhubungan Perusahaan sudah mengemukakan surat penjelasan penuh berhubung isu itu.
"Sebanyak 1,500 daripada 3,600 kakitangan kesatuan sekerja MAS sudah diberikan surat penjelasan berhubung isu pemberhentian kerja.
"Penjelasan itu sudah memadai kerana mengikut Akta Kerja 1955, Menteri tidak perlu mengemukakan sebab atau musabab pemberhentian seseorang pekerja," katanya pada sidang media, di sini, sebentar tadi.
Beliau menjawab dakwaan kesatuan sekerja MAS yang membuat tuntutan penjelasan kementerian yang mengambil masa dua tahun untuk melaksanakan tindakan mengikut undang-undang.
Riot berkata, kementerian tidak boleh mengambil tindakan menyaman syarikat penerbangan nasional atau individu kerana pemberhentian kerja skala besar berikutan syarikat sudah diisytiharkan muflis.
Sementara itu, katanya, penjelasan dibuat selepas dua tahun kerana tempoh moratorium pelan pemulihan MAS berakhir pada 24 Mei lalu.
MAS secara teknikalnya telahpun muflis seperti yang dijelaskan oleh Ketua Pegawai Eksekutifnya, Christoph Mueller dan pemberhentian pekerja adalah opsyen yang muktamad.

Batal IMAMS: Bukan sebab pegawai bukan Islam - Nazri Aziz

KUALA LUMPUR: Keanggotaan pegawai eksekutif bukan Islam dalam syarikat Integrated Manasik Monitoring System Sdn Bhd bukan punca sistem Pemantauan Manasik Bersepadu (IMAMS) dibatalkan serta-merta.

Memetik laporan Malaysiakini, Menteri Pelancongan dan Kebudayaan, Datuk Seri Mohamed Nazri Abdul Aziz berkata pembatalan sistem itu dibuat tidak bersetuju dengan caj dan pelaksanaannya yang wajib. 

"Tidak, tiada kaitan. Saya memutuskan untuk membatalkannya kerana tidak setuju dengan (jumlah caj) RM90 dan ia diumumkan sebagai wajib. Itu sahaja," memetik kenyataan beliau kepada Malaysiakini.
Malah, Mohamed Nazri berkata tindakan pembatalan itu juga dibuat lantaran percanggahan dengan keputusan peringkat Kabinet.

"Apa yang diumumkan kepada orang ramai bukan seperti apa yang kami bincang dalam Kabinet dan jelaskan di perbahasan peringkat jawatankuasa bajet kementerian di Parlimen.

"Caj yang dipersetujui adalah RM40, termasuk insurans, dan hanya pilihan (bukan wajib). Ia bukan program kementerian tetapi inisiatif sektor swasta, maka tak boleh diwajibkan," katanya lagi.

Sebelum ini viral di media sosial kononnya pegawai eksekutif bukan Islam dalam syarikat itu menjadi antara punca pembatalan sistem tersebut.

Di bawah sistem itu, individu yang ingin menunaikan ibadah umrah dikenakan caj berjumlah RM90.10 merangkumi RM45 bagi caj penggunaan IMAMS, RM40 untuk insurans takaful umrah dan RM5.10 untuk GST.

65 agensi pelancongan berstatus muassasah yang mempunyai Lesen Khas Umrah (LKU) diwajibkan menggunakan sistem tersebut yang bertujuan menangani penipuan pakej umrah menerusi proses permohonan visa umrah.

batal IMAMS-bukan sebab pegawai bukan Islam-Nazri Aziz

Monday, 11 December 2017

MONOPOLISTIC MARKET






A monopolistic market is a theoretical construct in which only one company may offer products and services to the public. This is the opposite of a perfectly competitive market, in which an infinite number of firms operate. In a purely monopolistic model, the monopoly firm is able to restrict output, raise prices and enjoy super-normal profits in the long run.



BREAKING DOWN 'Monopolistic Market'

Purely monopolistic markets are extremely rare and perhaps even impossible in the absence of absolute barriers to entry, such as a ban on competition or sole possession of all natural resources.


CAUSES OF MONOPOLISTIC MARKETS

Historically, monopolistic markets arose when single producers received exclusive legal privilege from the government, such as the arrangement between the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and AT&T between 1913 and 1984. During this period, no other telecommunications company was allowed to compete with AT&T because the government erroneously believed the market could only support one producer.

In fact, the term “monopoly” originated in English law to describe a royal grant. Such a grant authorized one merchant or company to trade in a particular good, while no other merchant or company could do so.

Short-run private companies may engage in monopoly-like behavior when production has relatively high fixed costs, which causes long-run average total costs to decrease as output increases. This could temporarily allow a single producer to operate on a lower cost curve than any other producers.



EFFECTS OF MONOPOLISTIC MARKETS

The common political and cultural objection to monopolistic markets is that a monopoly could charge a premium to their customers who, having no useful substitutes, are forced to give up even more money to the monopolist. In many respects, this is an objection against high prices, not necessarily monopolistic behavior.

The standard economic argument against monopolies is different. According to neoclassical analysis, a monopolistic market is undesirable because it restricts output, not because the monopolist benefits by raising prices. Restricted output equates to less production, which reduces total real social income.

Even if monopolistic powers exist, such as the U.S. Postal Service’s legal monopoly on delivering first-class letters, consumers often have many alternatives, such as using standard mail through FedEx or UPS, or using email instead of a letter. For this reason, it is extremely uncommon for monopolistic markets to successfully restrict output or enjoy super-normal profits in the long run.


REGULATION OF MONOPOLISTIC MARKETS

As with the model of perfect competition, the model for monopolistic competition is difficult or impossible to replicate in the real economy. True monopolies are generally the product of regulations against competition. It is common, for instance, for cities or towns to grant local monopolies to utility and telecommunications companies. Nevertheless, governments often regulate private business behavior that appears monopolistic, such as one firm owning a large share of a market. The FCC, WTO and EU each have rules for dealing with monopolistic markets. These are often called antitrust laws.



OLIGOPOLY







What is an 'Oligopoly?'

Oligopoly is a market structure in which a small number of firms has the large majority of market share. An oligopoly is similar to a monopoly, except that rather than one firm, two or more firms dominate the market. There is no precise upper limit to the number of firms in an oligopoly, but the number must be low enough that the actions of one firm significantly impact and influence the others.

BREAKING DOWN 'Oligopoly'
An example of an oligopoly is the wireless service industry in Canada, in which three companies – Rogers Communications Inc (RCI), BCE Inc (BCE) subsidiary Bell and Telus Corp (TU) – control approximately 90% of the market. Canadians are conscious of this oligopolistic market structure and often lump the three together as "Robelus," as though they were indistinguishable. In fact, they are often indistinguishable in price: in early 2014 all three companies raised the price for smartphone plans to $80 in most markets, more or less in tandem.

This example shows that participants in oligopolies are often able to set prices, rather than take them. For this reason oligopolies are considered to be able increase profit margins above what a truly free market would allow.

Most jurisdictions have laws against price fixing and collusion. An oligopoly in which participants explicitly engage in price fixing is a cartel: OPEC is one example. Tacit collusion, on the other hand, is perhaps more common though more difficult to detect. A stable oligopoly will often have a price leader; when the leader raises prices, the others will follow.

The alternative is for one or more firms to take advantage of the price rise by cutting prices and siphoning business away from the company with the highest price. If that happens, firms may align in a number of different ways: the majority may keep prices low in an attempt to squeeze the firm with the highest price out of the market; the majority may raise prices, isolating the "cheating" firm and putting it under financial strain; or they may each attempt to undercut the rest, setting off a price war that could damage them all. The late 19th-century railroad cartel in the U.S. was characterized by blatant collusion and price fixing, interspersed with vicious price wars.

Game theorists have developed models for these scenarios, which form a sort of prisoner's dilemma. In general, a situation of (tacit) collusion on prices is considered to be the Nash equilibrium state for oligopolies. Rather than using price, firms in oligopolies tend to prefer to use product differentiation, branding and marketing to compete, with the goal being to increase market share.

The reason new entrants seldom come in to disrupt the market is that oligopolistic industries tend to have high barriers to entry. Wireless carriers, for example, must either build and maintain towers, requiring massive capital expenditures, or lease the incumbents' infrastructure at vampiric rates. Carriers also tend to have strong, instantly recognizable brands. Even if these brands carry certain negative associations (ie, "cartel"), they provide a distinct advantage over unknown new entrants. Other industries that have commonly seen oligopolies also have high barriers to entry: oil and gas drillers, airlines, grocers and movie studios are a few examples.


A duopoly ​is an oligopoly composed of two participants. 

byeeeee 

Monday, 27 November 2017

OPINION - Why Corporate Tax Cuts Won't Make America Grow?






Donald Trump's 100-word proposal on taxes, which would slash by 57% the rate at which business profit are levied, seems like it would be a boon to business.

It would be for some as their tax rate falls to 15% from 35%. But that sharp drop, which would have devastating consequences for some firms, would also increase the federal debt that candidate Trump vowed to reduce.


For some companies the Trump tax plan, vague as it is, would mean the loss of more than half of their tax assets.

You may find the phrase “tax assets” jarring. Taxes are usually thought of as a liability, a cost.

When Corporate Taxes Are Corporate Assets
But the corporate income tax can be an asset – even a source of profit – thanks to two factors.

One is modern accrual accounting that tracks economic activity, not just when cash changes hands. When a car comes off the assembly line and is driven to a staging lot, Ford books it as revenue even though months may pass before a dealer sells the vehicle. Based on decades of experience, Ford accountants know the likely future receipts from that car. And when they are wrong, and the car gets sold at a premium or sent to a crushing machine, they adjust the accrued revenue.

The other factor is federal law. Congress requires companies to keep two sets of books, one for shareholders and another for the tax man.

The differences between book and tax accounting create opportunities and threats.

Companies with big capital spending on long-term assets like factories and buildings get to depreciate them faster for tax purposes than for shareholder records. The difference between these two can be enormous.

Money not paid in profits taxes this year – but instead paid years, or even decades, in the future – is the equivalent of a zero-interest loan from Uncle Sam. Think about how rich you would be if you paid, say, 10% of your income tax bill this year and got to keep the rest as a zero-interest loan for the next three decades. Invested wisely, the proceeds of that zero-interest loan would make you rich even when you eventually pay the taxes, using dollars whose value has been eroded by inflation.

Multinational companies get to expand on this by shifting profits from their American books to those of offshore subsidiaries. It’s as if you moved a dollar in your left pocket to your right and got a tax deduction – and a zero-interest loan of that dollar – until you put it back in the left pocket. (For more, see What If You Were Taxed Like a Multinational?)

Companies like Apple, with more than a quarter of a trillion dollars in cash overseas – note that “t”– would get a huge benefit. Money siphoned out of the U.S. to avoid a 35% tax could be brought back at a 15% percent tax rate.

Of course, Congress could require companies to settle up at the rate of tax avoided, but the odds on that are about the same as Vladimir Putin holding free elections in Russia.

Keep in mind that this fiscal year the corporate income tax is expected to raise about $428 billion. That’s a bit more than 2% of the Gross Domestic Product. Even if those revenues were cut 57%, the $180 billion in tax savings for businesses would come to just a penny on each dollar of economic output, not enough to spur the kind of economic growth needed to make up for the revenue loss.

How Sole Proprietors Would Fare
The written Trump statement said nothing about sole proprietors, but Trump aides later said they would include so-called Schedule C businesses in the 15% percent tax-rate plan.

That tax rate would be great for everyone with a successful business, including me, as the income taxes on our self-employment profits would fall from as much as 39.6% to 15%. But only five million out of 18.3 million profitable sole proprietorships would benefit from the lower rate, my analysis of IRS Table 1.4 for 2014, the latest full data available, shows.

Almost 72% of the country’s sole proprietors made less than $75,000, meaning they were already taxed at 15% or less.  

This would also be unfair to employees who make the same pay. Why should someone with a $500,000 profit from self-employment pay a federal income tax rate of 15% while an employee paid exactly the same sum would face a marginal tax rate of 35% with Trump’s plan.

Which Corporations Would Lose
Now let’s turn from winners (and those who are unaffected) to losers under the vague Trump proposal.

The corporate parents of major banks would be among the biggest losers were Congress to cut the corporate tax rate by 20 percentage points.

Citigroup, which owns Citibank, has $45.4 billion in deferred tax assets. Their value as offsets to future profits would fall to about $26 billion if the future tax rate is lowered, though for complex technical reasons the actual loss may be closer to $24 billion.

Trump might even be a loser if he has any net operating losses or NOLs from past years to take against future profits. Without access to his tax returns we cannot tell how much he will benefit from any changes in federal tax law.

Will America Grow Faster? Not So Much
The Trump administration touts corporate tax-rate cuts as a way to juice the economy and push growth up to 4% annually. That kind of growth is fantasy, as many serious economists with widely varying political perspectives have noted in recent months.

Decades of experience have shown that lower income tax rates don’t grow the economy, especially when public-sector spending that builds commonwealth is restricted.

For those companies that defer their taxes, the higher the tax rate the bigger the zero-interest loans these companies can engineer for themselves. Cutting tax rates reduces their source of no-cost capital.

Furthermore, corporate profits have been growing robustly even with current tax rates and their complex rules.

Corporate profits before tax, adjusted for inflation, doubled from 2000 to 2016, up from less than $1.1 trillion to almost $2.2 trillion last year.

Economic output per American rose 16% more than inflation, but incomes reported on tax returns hardly budged. The latest data is from 2014, up just 3.2% per taxpayer household from 2000, nowhere near the growth in profits or the economy.

This suggests that America has an income problem less with robust corporate profits or overall growth and more with anemic growth in individual incomes.

Curiously, wage growth in this country stalled for all but those near the top from 2001 through 2012, when the George W. Bush tax cuts were in full effect.

In 2013, when the top individual tax rate rose from 35% to 39.6%, wages paid to the bottom 75% of workers rose. The next year, when the Affordable Care Act added additional taxes on highly paid workers and on major investors, wage growth increased more – and, as I reported last fall, it accelerated much more in 2015.  In 2014 the median wage – half make more, half less – stood just six dollars higher than in 2000. Then it jumped by almost $1,100 in 2015.

Cutting corporate tax rates, especially without complex adjustments for those firms with deferred tax assets and those with deferred tax liabilities, will do nothing significant to improve the economy. But it will do a lot to make the complex mess that is our tax system even more of a mess.

David Cay Johnston's latest book, "The Making of Donald Trump," was published on August 2, 2016. His next one will be "The Prosperity Tax: A New Federal Tax Code for the 21st Century Economy." Johnston is a Distinguished Visiting Lecturer at Syracuse University College of Law and Whitman School of Management, and also writes for The Daily Beast and Tax Notes.



Difficult to Cut U.S. Corporate Tax Rate Below 26 Pct -Study



U.S. President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress would have a hard time slashing the corporate tax rate to below 26 percent, even if they eliminated nearly every business tax preference, according to a study released on Wednesday.

The analysis by the Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan think tank, found Republicans might have to expand the federal budget deficit to cut the corporate rate to Trump's proposed 15 percent or to the 23 percent level sought by leading tax policymakers from Congress and the administration.

The corporate income tax rate is now 35 percent, although many companies pay far less than that thanks to abundant loopholes.

"There's a lower boundary on this and it's much higher than what the president and congressional Republicans say," said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the center.

"The most likely outcome is that they're not going to reduce corporate taxes as much as they'd like to," he said.

Republicans have vowed to slash business tax rates, saying it would boost economic growth and help create jobs.

Eliminating tax breaks are a main focus of closed-door negotiations on Capitol Hill and in the White House.

But no policymakers have gone as far as the Tax Policy Center did in its study, measuring the impact of throwing out hundreds of tax breaks, including subsidies for research, alternative energy, fossil fuels and domestic manufacturing.

“In a revenue-neutral bill, Congress can’t get the rate below 26 percent even if it eliminates nearly every corporate tax expenditure,” Gleckman said in a blog posting accompanying the study.

White House officials and conservatives in Congress, including Senator Ted Cruz, have called for deficit-funded tax cuts as a way to spur economic growth.

But analysts warn that expanding the deficit would undermine economic growth by raising the federal debt burden and forcing interest rates higher.

Gleckman said policymakers could pay for tax cuts by finding new sources of revenue to compensate for lower rates, rather than expanding the deficit. But Republicans have already rejected revenue-raising options, including a border adjustment import tax and a carbon tax.

The study was funded by the nonprofit Peter G. Peterson Foundation.

(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Peter Cooney)




Tuesday, 21 November 2017

HOW TO DISTINGUISH BETWEEN FINANCE AND ECONOMICS?

HI ALLS!!!!
So this night we are gonna get to know what is the differences between finance and economy itself. Some of us might have that thought in our mind but not willing to ask due to shy or other else...So here are the simple note, these might give you a simple briefing about this issue



It is simpler than our thought right! hahaha

Pemberhentian kakitangan MAS: Penjelasan sudah memadai

KUALA LUMPUR: Kementerian Sumber Manusia, hari ini, tampil membuat penjelasan berhubung isu pemberhentian kerja 3,600 kakitangan kesatuan se...