Burger King buys Tim Hortons for $11bn

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Vernon, B.C.
we only go to a fast food outlet about once or maybe twice a year, but if we do, it is burger king.

those double whoppers with cheese are delicious, with fries of course.

i always request very very little mayonaisse etc, don't like it runny and juicy, i like to actually

taste the foods in the burger, not messy sauces.

they make good coffee too, maybe they can improve tim horton's coffee, i don't like it at all.


Yeah, to my way of thinking, Timmy's coffee is definitely over rated and when you look at the price it's actually a rip off. I have coffee at A & Dub quite regularly and their's isn't bad and the price is reasonable.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
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New American flag. We call it the Whoppa.
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
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that's only 11 hydro contract cancellation fees for mr. wynne. not that much really.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
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When Burger King gobbled up Tim Hortons two weeks ago, Joe Oliver crowed about Canada's low corporate tax rates. But, Linda McQuaig writes (link is external), Oliver was telling whoppers, not selling them:




What the Tims/BK deal really means — and what it cost us




One might be left with the impression that the corporate creator of the Whopper plans to invest a whopping $11 billion in Canada. Now there’s a whopper for you — but it’s not inside a bun.

The truth is that the Burger King-Tim Hortons deal is just a paper transaction that, apart from enriching some stockholders, likely will provide zero benefit for Canada, in terms of job creation or additional revenue for the public purse.
Certainly, south of the border, Americans were unimpressed:

Burger King is clearly trying to take advantage of a popular U.S. tax scheme known as “tax inversion,” whereby a corporation takes over a foreign company to get around U.S. tax laws requiring corporations to pay tax on their worldwide incomes. Canada doesn’t have such a requirement, making it easier for companies headquartered here to avoid taxes through “transfer pricing” — that is, shifting profits to offshore tax havens.

The Obama administration has been trying hard to clamp down on this “unpatriotic” tax inversion scheme, whereby some of America’s wealthiest corporations have managed to dodge billions of dollars in taxes.
The American president understands that this is all about a race to the bottom. And he would appreciate a little help from Canada:

The more we cut our tax rates, the more other countries feel obliged to cut theirs. Round and round it goes, with less and less revenue for vital public programs everywhere. It’s a race to the bottom only corporations can win.

Instead, we should be supporting the Obama administration in its efforts to stop international corporate tax dodging. (link is external) The White House is now locked in a fierce battle with powerful corporations over tax inversion schemes and also over the U.S. corporate tax rate, which — at 35 per cent — is one of the highest in the world. Corporations want it slashed.




White House Criticizes Corporate Tax 'Inversions' as Squabble Escalates