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Technology

Planning to buy Nothing Phone (1), you may be ‘late’ for now

Planning to buy Nothing Phone (1), you may be 'late' for now

Nothing Phone (1) has gone out of stock minutes after it went on sale at 12 pm earlier today. It’s not clear how many units were available for sale. All the models of the smartphone are showing ‘Currently Unavailable’ right now. There’s so far also no update when the phone will go on sale again. It seems delivery issues still persist for the brand. Soon after the smartphone went on sale there were reports that several buyers who had pre-ordered the smartphone did not get the device on the promised date. Flipkart reportedly sent Rs 1000 gift card to these buyers to ‘apologise’ for the delay in delivery. While Nothing has officially not said anything about the delayed delivery of the Nothing Phone (1), it does seem to be an issue.

Nothing Phone (1) price, offers and more
Nothing Phone (1) launched to much fanfare last month. The smartphone comes in three variants– 8GB+128GB (Rs 32,999), 8GB+256GB (Rs 35,999) and 12GB+256GB (Rs 38,999). The smartphone comes in two color options– Black and White. So far, Nothing has only launched Black version of the phone in India.

Flipkart is also showing discounts up to 13% on the phone. With discounts, customers can get the 8GB+128GB version at Rs 31,999, while 8GB+256GB and 12GB+ 256GB versions can be purchased at Rs 34,999 and Rs 37,999 respectively. But then, as mentioned above no model is available to purchase right now.

Nothing Phone (1) features and specifications
Nothing Phone (1) features a transparent back with a unique design composed of over 400 components. On the back, it has to Glyph Interfacewhich according to Nothing, is a new way of communicating to help minimize screen time.

Nothing Phone (1) sports a 6.55-inch OLED display with a 2400×1080 pixels resolution. Phone (1) comes with 60Hz-120HZ of adaptive refresh rate. The smartphone is powered by the Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G+ chipset designed specifically for Nothing and runs Nothing OS.

The handset features a dual camera setup with a 5OMP sensor, where the main camera is powered by Sony IMX766.

Nothing Phone (1) offers 18 hours of usage on a single charge and gets 50% charged within 30 minutes.

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Entertainment

Prey ending explained – how it links to Predator mystery

Prey ending spoilers follow.

Taking predator back to the 18th century, Prey revitalizes the series with the best movie since the iconic original.

The new movie centers on Naru (Amber Midthunder), a young Comanche warrior who dreams of being a hunter, only to be denied the chance as she’s a woman. However, the arrival of the Predator near her home gives Naru the ideal opportunity to provide her worth.

While it is set in 1719, Prey does feature references and Easter eggs to the predator franchise and the biggest one comes in the finale. It’s a nod to a long-running mystery in the series that goes all the way back to predator 2.

But if you weren’t aware of the significance, we’re here to help. We need to go into some major spoilers to do that though, so don’t read on if you haven’t seen the movie yet.

a young woman stands in the foreground looking worried with face paint on and two more women stand behind in prey

20th Century Studios

Prey ending explained

During the hunt for the Predator, Naru and her brother Taabe (Dakota Beevers) get captured by a group of fur trappers. The trappers intend to use the two as bait to lure the Predator so they can kill it, but that turns out as well as expected.

Naru and Taabe escape, and when she goes back to the trappers’ camp to fetch her dog, she comes across one of the trappers. He’s still alive, but barely, and he gives her a pistol to protect them both. Again, it doesn’t go well and the trapper is killed.

Unfortunately for Naru, Taabe is also killed by the Predator. However, she’s worked out a way to outwit the predator. Using an orange flower that cools her blood, Naru sneaks up on the Predator and lures it into a trap where she manages to remove its helmet, which she then uses to get the Predator to target itself. Bye-bye Predator.

Naru returns to her camp, reunites with her mother and is made a hunter after she presents the War Chief with the Predator’s head and the pistol. As the War Chief looks at it, we see an important inscription “Raphael Adolini 1715” on it that tells us this is no ordinary pistol.

prey

Disney+

predator fans will know it has a history in the series, but we’ll refresh your memory if you weren’t aware.

At the end of predator 2Mike Harrigan (Danny Glover) is given a flintlock pistol, inscribed with “Raphael Adolini 1715”, by Greyback after he’s provided himself by killing the City Hunter.

It wasn’t quite clear how the Predator got its hands on an ancient pistol or why it was treasured enough to be given as a gift to a worthy foe. Prey adds another interesting element into the mystery, which was addressed in a comic book short story released in July 1996 called predator: 1718.

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The story – set in 1718, obviously – seemingly solved the mystery about how Greyback ended up with the pistol. In it, Adolini faced a mutiny over a case of gold that his crew stole from a church, much to his anger.

Adolini battled his crew, and a watching Predator decided to join the battle and fight with Adolini. With most of the crew dead, the Predator turned his attention to Adolini and prepared to find out if he was a worthy warrior, only for the last alive member of Adolini’s crew to shoot him in the back.

The Predator killed the remaining crew member and as Adolini was dying, he gave the Predator his flintlock pistol. It’s how two centuries later, the pistol ended up in Greyback’s possession to give to Harrigan.

However, it now seems unclear whether this story is officially canon in the predator franchise. We’d assume the pistols are one-and-the-same (after all, that’s a big coincidence if not), so it’s unlikely a fur trapper would have possession of it in 1719 in order to give it to Naru.

amber midthunder as naru, prey

Disney

It’s possible that the trappers came across the same Predator who fought with Adolini, killing him and taking the pistol. The trappers didn’t seem to be much use against the Predator in Preyso if they knew how to kill a Predator, then how come they struggled so much in the movie?

A cleaner explanation would be that the story is no longer canon and the trappers got it from Adolini in 1718 or earlier (either gifted or stolen, doesn’t matter). But whichever story you believe, it doesn’t bode well for Naru’s future.

If it was the same pistol, it would mean that a Predator gets its hands on it after the events of Preyin order for Greyback to give it to Harrigan in 1997. The bleakest answer would be that another Predator returned to Earth in the 18th century, battled with Naru and killed her, taking the pistol back.

We’d prefer to think that a Predator just comes across the pistol long after Naru has lived a healthy and long life. But perhaps that’s a story a potential Prey sequel can tell…

Prey is available to watch now on Disney+ in the UK and on Hulu in the US.

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Categories
Sports

PremiAir signs Hill for Bathurst 1000

Cameron Hill (left) and Chris Pither (right)

Cameron Hill will make his Great Race debut in this year’s Repco Bathurst 1000 as co-driver to PremiAir Racing’s Chris Pither.

Hill is currently second in the Dunlop Super2 Series for Triple Eight Race Engineering, and the deal means he will drive another Triple Eight-built car at Mount Panorama, namely the #22 Coca-Cola ZB Commodore.

The 25-year-old won in his last start at the iconic circuit, the Hi-Tec Oils Bathurst 6 Hour, and claimed last year’s Porsche Paynter Dixon Carrera Cup Australia title.

He is thus high on confidence ahead of what will be not only his Supercars Championship debut, but first weekend racing at Mount Panorama in a Supercar.

“This will be my first main game race, and what better way to make my debut?” said Hill.

“While it may be my first time at Bathurst in a Supercar, I’ve got plenty of laps under my belt, having recently won the Bathurst 6 Hour after starting 60th due to a technical infringement.

“I’ve also raced in the Bathurst 12 Hour, in Carrera Cup, and the Toyota 86 Racing Series.

“For me, this is going to be an incredible experience, and I’m looking forward to being on the mountain. Hopefully, between Chris and I we can achieve a great result.”

Pither has strong expectations of his co-driver.

“It’s very hard to get your first opportunity in the Supercars Championship,” he said of Hill.

“Cam’s been going well in Super2, this year, so he deserves the opportunity.

“Racing in the Bathurst 1000 for the first time is a special experience I look forward to sharing with him.

“I know he’ll do a great job.”

Team Principal Matt Cook is hoping for “big things” given the synergy which plugging Hill into one of its cars represents.

“We are very excited to have Cam coming on board with Chris to co-drive the PremiAir Coca-Cola Racing Supercar,” Cook stated.

“Cam currently drives for Triple Eight Race Engineering in Super2 and our cars are Triple Eight cars, so the transition should be pretty seamless for him and we are hoping he can do some big things here with us.”

Hill will join the squad for a test day at Queensland Raceway on Tuesday, August 9 as part of PremiAir’s preparation for October’s Bathurst 1000.

The team is yet to announce James Golding’s co-driver for its Subway-backed car.

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Australia

Why Resilience NSW was doomed from the start

Some emergency services confirmed on Friday they were provided with core recommendations from the report relevant to them and will review those findings.

Former premier Gladys Berejiklian created the disaster management agency in response to the Black Summer bushfires, installing Fitzsimmons as its boss. It has since faced scrutiny over its role, budget and employee-related expenses amounting to $38.5 million for 245 staff.

But former fire chief and climate advocate Greg Mullins said Resilience NSW did not have the easiest start. After forming on May 1, 2020, the disaster agency was forced to begin operating immediately – coordinating recovery in the aftermath of the bushfires. Then it was forced to respond to major flooding events and a COVID-19 pandemic.

Mullins said when the disaster agency was first formed there had been many former emergency leaders who supported the move. “It was the first state government that had acknowledged out-of-scale disasters were happening because of climate change,” he said.

But he said the agency was tasked with a massive remit: to look after resilience and recovery. “They are both very difficult long-term jobs. Our concern is that dumping [the agency] after two years and blaming the boss could put us back behind the eight-ball as we get more and more consecutive disasters.”

NSW has battled two years of back-to-back disasters, including bushfires, a pandemic and floods.

NSW has battled two years of back-to-back disasters, including bushfires, a pandemic and floods.Credit:Nick Moir

Mullins said the new approach to resilience will need closer inspection once the report is publicly released, but many former emergency service commissioners will be prepared to be highly critical of its findings if they feel the approach does not do enough to prepare communities. But Mullins, like many others, still supported Fitzsimmons and said he was the best person for the job.

“They better have a bloody good reason to lose the expertise of someone of his caliber… Good luck to them to find someone better, they won’t.”

Former ACT Emergency Services Authority commissioner Peter Dunn said the approach to resilience and recovery needed to be community-led rather than the centralized approach that had been favored by the government. He worried that recommendations to appoint a new police commissioner risked further centralizing the disaster agency and would take control away from communities.

“We have gone in the exact wrong direction with the wrong lessons and prepared for the wrong disasters,” he said.

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Dunn suggested more funding was needed for communities to control how they would prepare and respond to natural disasters. The Productivity Commission estimated last year that 97 per cent of disaster funding is spent on recovery and clean-up, while only 3 per cent is spent on preparing communities, mitigating and resilience.

Lismore City Councilor Elly Bird said the community’s experience with Resilience NSW post-floods had been a mixed bag. She praised the efforts of officers on the ground who had done the best they could to help the community, but she said that there had been frustrating experiences where bureaucracy had delayed urgent help.

For example, in the days following the floods, Bird said an organization offered 1000 volunteers to help with the clean-up and recovery efforts but Resilience NSW needed to grant permission. Despite her best efforts, Bird was unable to secure the necessary approvals. She said another model of adaptation, preparedness and resilience should be used.

“The model of external agencies coming into a community and telling that community what needs to happen is fundamentally flawed,” she said. “Even before the existence of Resilience NSW, the best approach in an emergency is a community lead recovery. But over many events, it doesn’t seem like the government understands or is able to enable effective community lead response.”

“A dollar spent in the community is much more effective than a dollar poured into government. We need to resource communities because communities will respond first and always step up to support themselves and each other to recover.”

The inquiry’s findings will also recommend that responsibilities like emergency accommodation in evacuation centers should be allocated to the Department of Communities and Justice, which has daily expertise in dealing with people in crisis. Increased funding will be critical to supporting this, the report will advise.

The office which replaces Resilience NSW should instead focus on the response in the first 100 days after a disaster. Other recommendations in the report will include strategies to address the future management of flood-prone areas.

The report and the government’s response will be publicly released later this year.

Get to the heart of what’s happening with climate change and the environment. Our fortnightly Environment newsletter brings you the news, the issues and the solutions. Sign up here.

Categories
US

Senate Inflation Reduction Act gets US closer to climate change goals

Categories
Technology

This exciting Google search hack will make Googling faster and easier!

Google just updated its quote search hack! It will help you in ‘Googling’ fast, know all the details here.

Your Google Search just got even better! Google Search is one of the most useful tools whenever we need to find information about something. However, there are times when we need to look for a particular word or phrase. But did you know that you already have a Google Search hack that allows you to search for an exact word or phrase by simply putting quotation marks around it? Yes, it was always there! Put quotes around any word or phrase and it will only show pages that contain those exact words or phrases. It’s a great method to adopt whenever you need to find something specific. And now, this hack just got better!

“Now we’re making quoted searches better. The snippets we display for search results (meaning the text you see describing web content) will be formed around where a quoted word or phrase occurs in a web document,” Google confirmed in a blog post . This means it will be even easier to identify where to find them after you click the link and visit the content. Even on the desktop, this will bold the quoted material.

How Google Search “quoted” hack works

Google showed an example that if you did a search like this “google search”, it will show you a snippet with an exact phrase. Earlier, Google used to show you results that were included in the quoted word or phrase. And the small snippet under a link may not have shown exactly where the phrase appeared on a page.

“We’ve heard feedback that people doing quoted searches seeing value where the quoted material occurs on a page, rather than an overall description of the page. Our improvement is designed to help address this,” Google says about the update in the feature. Google also shared some pro tips that you should consider while doing quoted searches to get even better results.

Some of them include searching from within Developer Tools to match against all rendered text or avoiding using punctuations as it is seen as spaces. You can even learn more about the quote searches on Google here.

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Categories
Entertainment

Batgirl farce: Warner Bros’ decision to scrap DC film defies history of releasing duds

This week the news broke that Warner Bros had “shelved” the upcoming comic book film batgirl.

The surprise move means the $100 million movie, which had already been filmed, will never be released on streaming services as previously planned.

Initial reports suggested the problem was the film’s quality – supposedly, it was so bad that it had been declared “irredeemable”.

Subsequent reports have suggested the study actually ditched it for cynical tax reasons.

A Warner Bros spokesperson said in an official statement that the choice to scrap batgirl was due to a “strategic shift as it relates to the DC universe and HBO Max”.

Whatever the true reason, the sudden axing has left the cast and crew of the DC flick stunned and moviegoers outraged.

“We are saddened and shocked by the news,” directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah wrote in their response to the film being cancelled.

“We still can’t believe it. As directors, it is critical that our work be shown to audiences, and while the film was far from finished, we wish that fans all over the world would have had the opportunity to see and embrace the final film themselves.

“Maybe one day they will.”

As a DC fan and film buff, I hope the directors are right. Let us watch the film, judge it for ourselves, and perhaps even enjoy it. Honestly, how bad can it be?

It’s not as though the DC Extended Universe (DCEU) has a track record of only releasing certified masterpieces. Unlike its Marvel counterpart, the DCEU has included some absolute dud movies, all of them released quite happily by Warner Bros.

You may recall, for example, 1997’s batman and robin.

Considered the lowest rated Batman flick (12 per cent on Rotten Tomatoes), it’s filled with terrible dialogue (Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Mr. Freeze one-liner “Who killed the dinosaurs? The ice age!), awful costumes (nipples on the Batsuit!) and horrendous production designs.

Coincidentally, it also featured the cinematic debut of Batgirl, played by Alicia Silverstone in a supporting role.

How about 2004’s cat woman? The movie was a cat-astrophe, and its lead star Halle Berry was so poor that she won a Razzie.

Or how about 2011’s Green Lantern? The film that was meant to launch the DCEU was visually overwhelming, overproduced and badly written.

All three of these films had glaringly obvious flaws, and have gone down in history as being among the worst superhero films of all time. No one at Warner Bros stopped them from being released to the public.

How many different iterations of Batman have we seen, of wildly varying quality, over the years? The studio has never stopped making them.

This was the first time we were going to see Batgirl in the lead role – an intriguing premise. The movie had already been filmed. If any subpar flick were going to be saved, this was it.

yet Este is the film, rather than any of the duds above, that has fallen victim to Warner Bros’ apparent quality standards.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, batgirl had landed a score in the low 60s at its only test screening.

That is not a stellar rating, but as THR noted, test screenings are not the final judgment for a movie – and other films with comparable test scores have gone on to be successful at the box office. Wildly successful, in some cases. The Stephen King adaptation Itemfor example, grossed more than $US700 million globally.

If the studio was so concerned about batgirl and wanted to save the DCEU, why not postpone the movie and do reshoots?

It’s happened with other comic book films: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (almost $US1 billion at the box office), 2019’s X-Men: Dark Phoenix ($US250 million) and 2015’s Fantastic Four ($US168 million) to name a few.

None of these were masterpieces, but they got released, and DCEU fans got to judge them on their merits.

That’s all the directors of batgirl SE busca. They’ve been robbed of that chance, for reasons that increasing and sound as though they have more to do with money than passion or concern for the source material.

Maybe batgirl is the disaster it was first described as. Let’s find out. Put it on the streaming services. Give us a chance to watch it and decide for ourselves.

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Categories
Sports

Country boy Jed Holloway finally gets his Wallabies shot | Australia rugby union team

Jed Holloway thought his dream of playing for the Wallabies had died in 2020 when he was let go by the New South Wales Waratahs but a change in attitude resurrected his career and on Saturday he will play his first Test.

The abrasive loose forward would have made his debut in last month’s series against England but for a calf injury and so he will finally get to wear the gold shirt against Argentina in the Rugby Championship opener in Mendoza.

“It’s pretty surreal,” the 29-year-old told reporters from Argentina on Friday. “Something last year I thought would never eat. There was a little setback, but it wouldn’t be a part of my journey if I didn’t have a setback.”

Holloway conceded that the injury setback would have sent him off the rails earlier in his career, but a new perspective as a family man with a young daughter had kept him on an even keel.

“I’m a better player, better person, it just allows me to just really enjoy my footy,” he said. “I’m really happy that my form throughout the year has given me this opportunity and now it’s just taking it on Saturday.”

After being cut loose by the Waratahs two years ago, Holloway played for Toyota Verblitz in Japan and had a spell living in Florida. His second chance at him at the Waratahs this season almost did not come about with coach Darren Coleman initially skeptical that Holloway was a good fit for his rebuild project in Sydney.

“I knew I needed to come home with the right attitude,” Holloway recalled. “I knew I had the ability but the work ethic and attitude weren’t there.”

Wallabies coach Dave Rennie said Holloway fully deserved his chance after a fine season for the resurgent Waratahs, where he mainly played in the second row.

“He’s had to be patient but he’s got a really good skillset,” said the New Zealander. “He’s a good lineout forward and he’s got a bit of an edge about him and we think that’s going to be important going into the weekend.”

The flanker’s excitement on Friday was amplified by the inclusion on the bench of uncapped prop Matt Gibbon, whose brother Holloway grew up playing country rugby with in northern New South Wales.

There will also be a familiar face in the shape of Pumas coach Michael Cheika, who first brought Holloway to the Waratahs in 2013 and later included him in Wallabies training squads.

“I know Cheik, he’ll be fired up, he’ll probably be throwing golf clubs against walls like he did for us at the Waratahs,” Holloway laughed. “He’ll have them fired up, so we’ll need to be ready to go as well.”

wallabies: Tom Wright, Jordan Petaia, Len Ikitau, Hunter Paisami, Marika Koroibete, Quade Cooper, Nic White, Rob Valetini, Michael Hooper (captain), Jed Holloway, Matt Philip, Darcy Swain, Allan Alaalatoa, Folau Fainga’a, James Slipper . Reserve: Lachlan Lonergan, Matt Gibbon, Taniela Tupou, Nick Frost, Rob Leota, Pete Samu, Jake Gordon, Reece Hodge.

Argentina: Juan Cruz Mallia, Santiago Cordero, Matias Orlando, Jeronimo de la Fuente, Emiliano Boffelli, Santiago Carreras, Tomas Cubelli; Pablo Matera, Marcos Kremer, Juan Martin Gonzalez, Tomas Lavanini, Matias Alemanno, Francisco Gomez Kodela, Julian Montoya (captain), Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro. Reserve: Agustin Creevy, Thomas Gallo, Joel Sclavi, Santiago Grondona, Rodrigo Bruni, Lautaro Bazan Velez, Tomas Albornoz, Matias Moroni.

Categories
Australia

Accused backpacker murderer returns to Perth

Tobias Friedrich Moran, accused of murdered his former German backpacker girlfriend, has returned to Perth after being released on bail by a sydney magistrate.

The 42-year-old returned to Western Australia from where he was extradited.

Moran was greeted by the media and his wife after he exited the domestic terminal.

Tobias Moran arrives back at Perth Airport after being released on bail.
Tobias Moran arrives back at Perth Airport after being released on bail. (9News)

Bail conditions stipulate he must report to police three days a week and must not communicate via any encrypted websites.

Bail was granted after a magistrate found on Friday “it doesn’t appear in this case to be any direct or indirect evidence connecting him to the offence.”

“It’s not the strongest circumstantial case I have seen,” Magistrate Margaret Quinn said.

Tobias Moran arrives back at Perth Airport after being released on bail.
Tobias Moran arrives back at Perth Airport after being released on bail. (9News)

Police allege Moran suffocated or smothered his girlfriend in a camper van in Lismore and disposed of her body nearby.

Moran reported the school teacher missing before she was found days later 100 meters from the camper van.

Her body was too decomposed for a coroner to determine the cause of death, but it is believed to be asphyxiation.

German backpacker Simone Strobel was found dead in Lismore in 2005.
German backpacker Simone Strobel was found dead in Lismore in 2005. (Supplied)

Police last week confirmed they were communicating with German authorities about two arrest warrants for suspects who had been “persons of interest from the very beginning”.

Moran’s sister Katrin Suckfuel and friend Jens Martin were also traveling with the pair.

Categories
US

Does the Inflation Reduction Act violate Biden’s $400,000 tax pledge?

JimWatson | Afp | Getty Images

Senate Democrats’ package of climate change, health-care, drug pricing and tax measures unveiled last week has proponents and opponents debating whether the legislation violates a pledge President Joe Biden has made since his presidential campaign, to do not raise taxes on households with incomes below $400,000 a year.

The answer isn’t quite as simple as it seems.

“The fun part about this is, you can get a different answer depending on who you ask,” said John Buhl, an analyst at the Tax Policy Center.

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The White House has used $400,000 as a rough dividing line for the wealthy relative to middle and lower earners. That income threshold equates to about the top 1% to 2% of American taxpayers.

The new bill, the Inflation Reduction Act, doesn’t directly raise taxes on households below that line, according to tax experts. In other words, the legislation wouldn’t trigger an increase on taxpayers’ annual tax returns if their income is below $400,000, experts said.

But some aspects of the legislation may have adverse downstream effects — a sort of indirect taxation, experts said. This “indirect” element is where opponents seem to have directed their ire.

What’s in the Inflation Reduction Act

The legislation — brokered by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., and Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., who’d been a key centrist holdout — would invest about $485 billion toward climate and health-care measures through 2031, according to a Congressional Budget Office analysis issued Wednesday.

Broadly, that spending would be in the form of tax breaks and rebates for households that buy electric vehicles and make their homes more energy-efficient, and a three-year extension of the current Affordable Care Act subsidies for health insurance.

The bill would also raise an estimated $790 billion via tax measures, reforms for prescription drug prices and a fee on methane emissions, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Taxes account for the bulk — $450 billion — of the revenue.

Critics say corporate changes could affect workers

Specifically, the legislation would provide more resources for IRS enforcement of tax cheats and would tweak the “carried interest” rules for taxpayers who earn more than $400,000. The change to carried-interest rules — which allow certain private equity and other investors to pay a preferential tax rate on profits — is likely dead, though, after Democratic leaders agreed to scrap it to win support from Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-AZ.

Those elements aren’t controversial relative to the tax pledge — they don’t raise the annual tax bills middle and low earners owe, experts said.

The Inflation Reduction Act would also implement a 15% corporate minimum tax, paid on the income large companies report to shareholders. This is where “indirect” taxes might come into play, experts said. For example, a corporation with a higher tax bill might pass on those additional costs to employees, perhaps in the form of a lower raise, or reduced corporate profits may hurt 401(k) and other investors who own a piece of the company in a mutual fund.

The Democrats’ approach to tax reform means increasing taxes on low- and middle-income Americans.

Sen. mike krapo

Republican of Idaho

The current corporate tax rate is 21% but some companies are able to reduce their effective tax rate and therefore pay back their bill.

As a result of the policy, those with incomes below $200,000 would pay almost $17 billion in combined additional tax in 2023, according to a Joint Committee on Taxation analysis published July 29. That combined tax burden falls to about $2 billion by 2031, according to the JCT, an independent scorekeeper for Congress.

“The Democrats’ approach to tax reform means increasing taxes on low- and middle-income Americans,” Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, ranking member of the Finance Committee, said of the analysis.

Others say financial benefits outweigh indirect costs

However, the JCT analysis does not provide a complete picture, according to experts. That’s because it doesn’t account for the benefits of consumer tax rebates, health premium subsidies and lower prescription drug costs, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Observers who consider indirect costs should weigh these financial benefits, too, experts argue.

“The selective presentation by some of the distributional effects of this bill neglects benefits to middle-class families from reducing deficits, from bringing down prescription drug prices and from more affordable energy,” a group of five former Treasury secretaries from both Democratic and Republican administrations wrote Wednesday.

The $64 billion of total Affordable Care Act subsidies alone would “be more than enough to counter net tax increases below $400,000 in the JCT study,” according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which also estimates Americans would save $300 billion on costs and premiums for prescription drugs.

The combined policies would offer a net tax cut for Americans by 2027, the group said.

Further, setting a minimum corporate tax rate shouldn’t be viewed as an “extra” tax, but a “reclaiming of revenue lost to tax avoidance and provisions benefitting the most affluent,” argued the former Treasury secretaries. They are Timothy Geithner, Jacob Lew, Henry Paulson Jr., Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers.

There are additional wrinkles to consider, though, according to Buhl of the Tax Policy Center.

For example, to what extent do companies pass on their tax bills to workers versus shareholders? Economists differ on this point, Buhl said. And what about companies with a lot of excess cash on hand? Might that cash buffer lead a company not to levy an indirect tax on its workers?

“You could end up going down these rabbit holes forever,” Buhl said. “It’s just one of the fun parts of tax pledges,” he added.

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