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14 votes
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Traders are betting that GameStop will jump 50% within two weeks
14 votes -
Charlie Munger dies at age 99
9 votes -
The McDonald's theory of why everyone thinks the economy sucks
48 votes -
The US Supreme Court case seeking to shut down wealth taxes before they even exist, has potential to end existing tax worth hundreds of billions
33 votes -
Kettle of vultures
3 votes -
Texas businesses file amicus brief saying abortion ban costs state nearly $15 billion a year
24 votes -
Why do you think Sam Altman was fired from OpenAI?
Anybody have some greater amount of background or context on this? I certainly don't see it helping anything, but I know nothing of the Valley or its ways
36 votes -
Newsweek's World's Most Trustworthy Companies listing
2 votes -
The counterintuitive truth about [government] deficits
11 votes -
Why banks are suddenly closing down customer accounts
28 votes -
The ‘Georgists’ are out there, and they want to tax your land
31 votes -
Payments app Zelle begins refunds for imposter scams after Washington pressure
13 votes -
WeWork files for bankruptcy in the US
39 votes -
How millions of US borrowers got $127 billion in student loans canceled
15 votes -
WeWork files for bankruptcy amid office market downturn
14 votes -
Klarna reports first quarterly profit in four years – swing to profit of £9.6m by Swedish firm improves its fortunes in run-up to possible £12bn flotation
9 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried is a feature [of effective altruism], not a bug
31 votes -
Crypto Twitter found Sam Bankman-Fried's fraud
9 votes -
Corporate funding for universities: serving society or human greed?
6 votes -
Swedish fintech giant Klarna has reached an agreement with workers that were set to strike next week
12 votes -
Maersk to cut 10,000 jobs as shipping firm revenue slides
12 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried convicted of fraud over FTX’s collapse
64 votes -
Why the US never saves money on health care
25 votes -
Regular Americans are getting richer
31 votes -
NYC homeowner costs are rising at three times the inflation rate
20 votes -
Norway's $1.4 trillion sovereign wealth fund, the world's largest, on Tuesday reported losses of 2.1% in the third quarter, as all asset classes fell in value
10 votes -
Fraud, abuse, fingerprinting, privacy, and openness – Why my bank is fingerprinting me and why that's fine
4 votes -
The region at the heart of Germany’s economic stagnation
6 votes -
Canadian federal government considering new caps on payday lending and high risk lending
12 votes -
Europe's single currency, used daily by about 350 million people, has become a hot topic in an unlikely place – Sweden
12 votes -
Who profits most from America’s baffling health-care system?
28 votes -
Something is golden in the state of Denmark – can Novo Nordisk's success really be a problem for the Danish economy?
8 votes -
Ten years of exposing the financial secrets of some of the world’s most powerful people
12 votes -
It’s official: The era of China’s global dominance is over
22 votes -
Federal Reserve to propose lowering US debit-card swipe fees
8 votes -
Detroit wants to be the first big American city to tax land value
33 votes -
Guffipedia – Lucy Kellaway’s dictionary of business jargon and corporate nonsense
8 votes -
The fallout from Mozambique’s debt scandal reaches a London court
4 votes -
Lockheed revenue rises on sustained weapons demand amid geopolitical tensions
9 votes -
Africa is dogged by debt
10 votes -
Please explain tax credits to me (US)
I feel like I have a basic understanding of tax credits, but nothing so far as would make the most sense in what I want to know: I'm looking into buying a new car, and it looks like I can get a...
I feel like I have a basic understanding of tax credits, but nothing so far as would make the most sense in what I want to know: I'm looking into buying a new car, and it looks like I can get a 7500 tax credit for the car I'm interested in buying. My understanding is that these credits are "non-refundable" meaning I don't actually get that money back, but how does it still work? I pay into the income tax (I know, I don't want to know the benefits of doing this vs not, it's just easier for me to pay more and get some back when the time comes), so I always get a refund. Would my refund be higher then because I get a credit on the taxes that I paid in? Or would it be the same and my tax liability would be reduced?
I need someone to explain this to me like I'm 5, please!
15 votes -
Costco capitalism
23 votes -
Ozempic is bad for [the fast food] business
17 votes -
The robots are coming, but older workers have less to fear than they might think
7 votes -
Rising long-term interest rates are posing the latest threat to a US economic ‘soft landing’
24 votes -
Sam Bankman-Fried stuff: More Kelly sorry
7 votes -
Airbnb is fundamentally broken, its CEO says. He plans to fix it.
26 votes -
ILWU dockworkers union files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
8 votes -
Money Stuff: FTX might have found some money
6 votes