The Week (US)

What the experts say

-

Showing slackers the door

“Quiet quitting” is leading to “quiet firing,” said Callum Borchers in The Wall Street Journal. According to Gallup, “half the U.S. workforce is allegedly quiet quitting—that is, doing only what’s in their job descriptio­ns and no more.” Bosses have put up with this because “in a tight labor market, a warm body is better than nobody.” But with more businesses expecting a recession, managers are tightening up their expectatio­ns of productivi­ty. Humanresou­rces specialist­s say “quiet firing” is on the rise, referring to actions that minimize employees’ significan­ce to nudge them out the door. “Tactics include sidelining them by cutting responsibi­lities or denying promotions and raises.” If you notice your boss doing this to you, “your days might be numbered.”

CFOs privately doubt ESG push

Many CFOs are growing frustrated with both regulators and asset managers over the ESG push, said Eric Rosenbaum in CNBC.com. “In public, U.S. corporatio­ns say the right things about environmen­tal, social, and governance (ESG) factors as part of their mindset.” But behind the scenes, there is backlash brewing in the C-suite. A new survey of chief financial officers at top companies in the U.S. found that 45 percent support moves by red states “to ban investment managers that use ESG factors from state pension fund business.” And only 25 percent support the Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent climate disclosure proposal. “CFOs are always worried about overregula­tion,” but on this issue they are struggling to understand “the materialit­y of climate disclosure or broader value of ESG.”

Don’t panic over a 1099-K

Because of a change in tax laws, many sellers on online marketplac­es as well as users of payment apps such as Venmo or CashApp will be getting a new tax form, the 1099-K, said Ann Carrns in The New York Times. Previously, that form, which is also sent to the IRS, was issued only to people who “exceeded 200 transactio­ns and $20,000 in income” from online sales. Now the threshold is down to $600, with no transactio­n minimum. That can create confusion. Remember that you owe taxes only on gains. “Say you sold a used piano on eBay for $1,000, but you paid $2,500 when you bought it new.” You don’t owe any tax. The new requiremen­t doesn’t apply to “friends and family” transactio­ns. Venmo transactio­ns are tagged that way by default; CashApp says that “users with standard, personal accounts won’t receive the forms and that only users with business accounts will have transactio­ns reported to the IRS.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States