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Intuit Adds Proper Finance Team Members to Small Business Group

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Intuit Adds Proper Finance Team Members to Small Business Group

Intuit has acquired intellectual property (IP) and hired talent from financial data platform and tools provider Proper Finance.

The team members will join Intuit’s FinTech and Small Business and Self-Employed Group (SBSEG) Money teams, helping to “accelerate innovation,” Intuit said in a Monday (March 11) blog post.

“Proper Finance brings deep expertise that will help us accelerate our ability to address this opportunity across the Small Business and Self-Employed Group’s $188 billion total addressable market,” James Barrese, senior vice president of FinTech at Intuit, said in the release.

Intuit’s Money portfolio includes connected tools, expert services and insights that accelerate money movement and provide small businesses with advanced money management capabilities, according to the release.

The Proper Finance team members will bring their expertise in digital banking, payments, money movement, and financial operations and infrastructure to their new roles in the Money teams, the release said.

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Proper Finance was founded in 2021 with a mission to “empower every company with modern tools for financial data integrity,” Kyle Maloney, co-founder and CEO of Proper Finance, said in the release.

When announcing the closing of its seed round in June 2022, the firm said its integrated reconciliation and ledger data platform allowed FinTechs to manage their financial data and maintain complete financial accuracy.

“Joining Intuit will bring us closer to our goal of improving the health of the financial ecosystem,” Maloney said in the Monday press release. “Together with Intuit, we will expand the impact of our expertise to help companies move and track money accurately and efficiently.”

In another recent development, Intuit unveiled a new financial tool for one-person businesses in February. The new QuickBooks Solopreneur helps these entrepreneurs manage their finances, set goals and prepare for tax time. It is compatible with the QuickBooks mobile app on iOS and Android devices.

In January, Intuit integrated TurboTax into two of its other products — Credit Karma and QuickBooks — saying it aimed to streamline the tax preparation and filing process for individuals and small businesses. The new integrations combine the tax knowledge engine of TurboTax with the filer’s personal and financial data that is already present in Credit Karma or QuickBooks. 

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Pakistan President Zardari gives his assent to tax-laden Finance Bill criticised by opposition

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Pakistan President Zardari gives his assent to tax-laden Finance Bill criticised by opposition

Pakistan president Asif Ali Zardari
| Photo Credit: PTI

Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari on June 30 gave his assent to the government’s tax-heavy Finance Bill 2024, which drew sharp criticism from the Opposition which labelled it as an IMF-driven document that was harmful to the public for the new fiscal year, according to a media report.

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb presented the Budget in the National Assembly on June 12, drawing sharp criticism from the opposition parties, especially jailed former premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), as well as coalition ally Pakistan Peoples Party led by former foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari.

On June 28, Parliament passed the Pakistani Rs 18,877 billion Budget for the fiscal year 2024-25, detailing the expenditures and income of the government.

The Opposition parties, mainly parliamentarians backed by currently incarcerated former premier Khan, had rejected the Budget, saying it would be highly inflationary.

During the National Assembly session, opposition lawmakers criticised the Budget, asserting that it was now an open secret that the document was dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Leader of the Opposition Omar Ayub Khan had denounced the budget as “economic terrorism against the people”.

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Earlier this week, the PPP — which had initially boycotted the debate over the Budget — decided that it would vote for the finance bill despite certain reservations.

On Friday, the National Assembly passed the budget with some amendments. The motion was preceded by fiery speeches from the opposition, who described the budget as unrealistic, anti-people, anti-industry, and anti-agriculture, the Dawn newspaper reported.

President Zardari on Sunday gave assent to the bill in accordance with Article 75 of the Constitution, the media wing of the President House said, adding that the bill would be applicable from July 1. Under Article 75 (1), the president has no power to reject or object to the finance bill, which is considered to be a money bill as per the Constitution.

On June 28, the Government extended exemptions in specific sectors while announcing new tax measures in several areas to generate additional revenue in the coming fiscal year to meet the International Monetary Fund’s criteria.

Pakistan is in talks with the IMF for a loan of $6 billion to USD 8 billion, the report said. Earlier this week, PM Shehbaz confirmed that the budget was prepared in collaboration with the IMF.

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Amendments include introducing a capital value tax on property in Islamabad, implementing new tax measures on builders and developers and increasing the Petroleum Development Levy (PDL) on diesel and petrol by Pakistani Rs 10 instead of the proposed Pakistani Rs 20.

According to the budget documents, the gross revenue receipts have been estimated at Pakistani Rs 17,815 billion, including Pakistani Rs 12,970 billion in tax revenues and Pakistani Rs 4,845 billion in non-tax revenue.

The share of provinces in the federal receipts will be Pakistani Rs 7,438 billion. The growth target had been set at 3.6% during the next fiscal year. Inflation is expected to be 12%, budget deficit 5.9% of GDP and primary surplus will be one per cent of the GDP.

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Ukraine has a month to avoid default

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Ukraine has a month to avoid default

War is still exacting a heavy toll on Ukraine’s economy. The country’s GDP is a quarter smaller than on the eve of Vladimir Putin’s invasion, the central bank is tearing through foreign reserves and Russia’s recent attacks on critical infrastructure have depressed growth forecasts. “Strong armies,” warned Sergii Marchenko, Ukraine’s finance minister, on June 17th, “must be underpinned by strong economies.”

Following American lawmakers’ decision in April to belatedly approve a funding package worth $60bn, Ukraine is not about to run out of weapons. In time, the state’s finances will also be bolstered by G7 plans, announced on June 13th, to use Russian central-bank assets frozen in Western financial institutions to lend another $50bn. The problem is that Ukraine faces a cash crunch—and soon.

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Finance

Florida Tech Names Kimberly Williams New Vice President for Administration, Chief Financial Officer – Space Coast Daily

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Florida Tech Names Kimberly Williams New Vice President for Administration, Chief Financial Officer – Space Coast Daily

will start at Florida Tech on July 8

Kimberly D. Williams, who has more than 20 years of experience in finance, higher education, and law, has been named Florida Tech’s vice president of administration and finance and chief financial officer. (Florida Tech image)

BREVARD COUNTY • MELBOURNE, FLORIDA – Kimberly D. Williams, who has more than 20 years of experience in finance, higher education, and law, has been named Florida Tech’s vice president of administration and finance and chief financial officer.

Williams most recently served as the vice president for business affairs, CFO and treasurer at the University of Findlay in Ohio. She will start at Florida Tech on July 8.

“The campus community feedback received when Kim visited us was overwhelmingly positive,” President John Nicklow wrote in an email to the university announcing her hire. “I’m confident that she has the skill set to help move our university forward, together.”

Williams graduated from Fayetteville State University with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and earned an MBA from Western Kentucky University. She received her Juris Doctor from the University of Arkansas School of Law.

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She served as a civil litigation attorney in Missouri for five years before becoming chief financial officer and corporate counsel for a global, consolidated corporation in the aviation industry.

There, she oversaw the company’s overall financial health and gave project oversight across several fields as a strategic leader.

In 2016 Williams entered higher education, becoming business manager and director of business services for the University of Arkansas. After two years at UA, she was named assistant vice president for administrative and business services at Middle Tennessee State University.

As the senior administrator, she supported the department’s mission to provide effective and innovative business and administrative services to enrich learning and academic excellence on campus.

Williams stayed in Tennessee until 2022, when she became the vice president for business affairs, CFO and treasurer at University of Findlay in Findlay, Ohio. There, she oversaw all matters related to the financial management of the university, serving as the primary steward of its financial and physical resources.

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Williams is a member of several professional associations, including the National Association of College and University Business Officers, the Council of Independent Colleges, the Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Ohio, the Ohio Association of College and Business Officers and the National Association of Educational Procurement.

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