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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.29+0.6%Nov 7 4:00 PM EST

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To: sense who wrote (156703)4/20/2020 5:36:15 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

   of 217576
 
observing the local scene, am noting that my daughter's effort w/ local charity to help the disadvantaged on the one hand is helping, on global and volunteering basis. quite a bit of funds were raised from Europe, Asia, N.America, and S Africa.

Here below is the tee-ing up of less than volunteer basis, and so it starts.

Arguable which approach is best, as in most efficacious and least disruptive, whether printing, borrowing, taxing, jubilee, or outright taking. In all cases, volunteering helps.

bloomberg.com

South Africa to Weigh a Wealth Tax to Aid Recovery, Rapport Says
Loni Prinsloo
19 April 2020, 18:14 GMT+2



Commercial office buildings stand in the skyline in the the Central Business District (CBD) of Johannesburg, South Africa on April 6.
Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg

The South African government will consider a proposal for a one-off wealth tax during an economic recovery planning meeting on Monday, according to a report in Rapport.

Such a tax could assist Africa’s most industrialized economy as it bounces back from the coronavirus outbreak and a five-week lockdown that is scheduled to be lifted on April 30. The proposal comes from a group of economists, led by former South African National Treasury budget chief Michael Sachs, the local newspaper reported, citing a plan that was presented to the cabinet last week.

A number of South Africa’s richest citizens, such as Johann Rupert, Patrice Motsepe and Nicky Oppenheimer have already committed large sums to help the country’s government during the crisis. Many executives across the country have also donated one-third of their salaries to the cause.

South Africa plans to slowly reopen parts of the economy, restarting about 50% of its mining production in coming days. It has had more than 3,000 coronavirus infections, with 52 deaths, since its first reported case on March 5.
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