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Canberra agrees to mining tax concessions

'Electroshock': China tops global art market
Paris (AFP) March 24, 2011 - China topped the United States in 2010 as the country with the richest art auctions, according to a French company that tracks global art deals. "It's an electroshock in the history of the global at market," Thierry Ehrmann, president of Artprice, told AFP. "Fine art" auctions in China -- mainly Hong Kong, Beijing and Shanghai -- topped 3.1 billion dollars (2.2 billion euros) last year, he said. China generated sales accounting for 33 percent of art sold in 2010, while the US cash registers took in 30 percent.

Britain represented 19 percent of the total, with France coming in fourth place with five percent. It was only four years ago, in 2007, that China nudged past France into third place, an indication of how quickly the economic powerhouse has moved to the first rung of the rarefied world of art auctions, Ehrmann said. Not just the amount of money changing hands has made China number one, but the rise of Chinese artists as well, he added. In Artprice's ranking of the 10 top-earning artists for 2010, four are from the Middle Kingdom.

The previous year, there was only one. After Pablo Picasso, the artist whose works brought in more cash than any other in 2010 was Qi Baishi, who died in 1957. Compatriots Zhang Daqian, Xu Beihong and Fu Baoshi were in third, eight and ninth place respectively. The prominence of Chinese artists in the ranking is all the more remarkable given the high "liquidity" -- the high volume of works brought to auction -- of Picasso and the number two earner, Andy Warhol, Ehrmann said. Part of the Serveur Group, Artprice describes itself as the world leader in data on pricing and sales in the art auction market. The company is listed on the Paris exchange.
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (UPI) Mar 24, 2011
In what is seen as a victory for mining giants, the Australian government has agreed to concessions on its proposed resource tax, including crediting miners for "current and future royalties" charged by state governments.

The government accepted all 98 recommendations put forth by a policy review group led by Don Argus, former chairman of BHP Billiton.

"The government supports the recommendation that all current and future royalties be credited and that all levels of government should ensure (that) the taxation of Australia's resources preserves our international competitiveness," Australia's Minister for Energy and Resources Martin Ferguson said Thursday in a statement.

The issue of royalties had been an obstacle to agreement on the Mineral Resource Rent Tax.

First proposed by former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd last May as a "super-profits" resources tax, the MRRT called for a 40 percent tax on profits across Australia's mining industry. But Rudd's proposal faced fierce opposition from mining giants such as Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.

A compromise was agreed upon in July with Rudd's successor, Julia Gillard, reducing the rate to 30 percent and restricting it to coal and iron ore miners. Australia is the world's largest exporter of coal and iron ore.

In October the Gillard administration said it wouldn't credit future royalty hikes, even though the agreement said all royalties would be covered.

Ferguson said Thursday a group made up of industry representatives and government officials would be established to continue the consultation process for drafting the MRRT legislation, which is to be introduced to Parliament by the end of the year.

Scott Grimley, mining leader at Ernst and Young, said the likely structure of the tax "strikes a reasonable balance between government's objectives and industry's objectives," the Financial Times reports.

Small-scale miners, with an annual profit of less than $50 million, would be exempt from the MRRT, which is expected to raise $7.5 billion in its first two years and is to apply from July 2012.

The Association of Mining and Exploration Companies, representing mid-tier and emerging miners, said that it was "extremely disappointed" that the concerns of its members hadn't been considered by the federal government.

"There are significant 'points of difference' between emerging mining companies and the large multinational, multi-commodity conglomerates that 'negotiated' the MRRT framework with the Gillard government," the group's Chief Executive Officer Simon Bennison said in a statement Thursday.



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