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Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Law
Standards Of Tax Practice Accuracy-Related Penalties; Aba Opinion 85-352, J. Timothy Philipps
Standards Of Tax Practice Accuracy-Related Penalties; Aba Opinion 85-352, J. Timothy Philipps
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Recent Developments - Taxation Of Individuals, Partnerships, Estates And Trusts And Exempt Organizations, Meade Emory
Recent Developments - Taxation Of Individuals, Partnerships, Estates And Trusts And Exempt Organizations, Meade Emory
William & Mary Annual Tax Conference
No abstract provided.
Doping Out The Capitalization Rules After Indopco, John W. Lee
Doping Out The Capitalization Rules After Indopco, John W. Lee
Faculty Publications
In this article, Lee provides guidance for Treasury and the IRS (in their promised clarification of application of INDOPCO). He delineates how to avoid what he perceives as the past pitfalls of capitalization of recurring, insubstantial, or relatively short-lived expenditures with Ito, or inadequate, amortization. The article also sets forth models for (a) amortizing as. a freestanding deferred charge long-lived substantial self-created intangibles such as business expansion costs, including employee training costs, and (b) expensing, or perhaps better, amortizing currently less substantial or regularly recurring, steady state self-created intangibles (such as repairs and advertising, respectively).
Tax Expenditure Budgets: A Critical View, Jeffrey S. Lehman, Douglas A. Kahn
Tax Expenditure Budgets: A Critical View, Jeffrey S. Lehman, Douglas A. Kahn
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Income Tax Rhetoric (Or Why Do We Want Tax Reform?), Beverly I. Moran
Income Tax Rhetoric (Or Why Do We Want Tax Reform?), Beverly I. Moran
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
The 1992 presidential election is over but the United States economy still faces hard times. Each man who hoped to lead us promised to revive our sick economy, and each cure promised included a strong dose of tax reform. At no time during the campaign or the transition did anyone seem to ask: Can tax reform actually increase employment, lower the deficit, nwerse our trade imbalance, or provide any other boost out of the recession? Why do Americans accept the notion that economic recovery requires tax reform? We did not always think this way. Why does it seem so natural …
Is An Employment-Discrimination Award Taxable?, L. Scott Stafford
Is An Employment-Discrimination Award Taxable?, L. Scott Stafford
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Does Treasury Have Authority To Index Basis For Inflation?, Lawrence A. Zelenak
Does Treasury Have Authority To Index Basis For Inflation?, Lawrence A. Zelenak
Faculty Scholarship
In this article he examines the claim, which has been publicized in recent months, that the Treasury Department could unilaterally index the capital gains tax for inflation by a new regulation interpreting code section 1012. He concludes, in light of more than seven decades of administrative, judicial and legislative history, that such unilateral action would be invalid.
Commentary: The Tax Legislative Process -- A Critical Need, William D. Popkin
Commentary: The Tax Legislative Process -- A Critical Need, William D. Popkin
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Taxation, Negative Amortization And Affordable Mortgages, Michael S. Knoll
Taxation, Negative Amortization And Affordable Mortgages, Michael S. Knoll
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Corporate Integration: Do The Uncertainties Outweigh The Benefits?, Reed Shuldiner
Corporate Integration: Do The Uncertainties Outweigh The Benefits?, Reed Shuldiner
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
A General Approach To The Taxation Of Financial Instruments, Reed Shuldiner
A General Approach To The Taxation Of Financial Instruments, Reed Shuldiner
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Tax Policy And Panda Bears, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Tax Policy And Panda Bears, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Articles
In this article. Professors Kahn and Lehman argue that the concept of tax expenditure is flawed as a tool for measuring the propriety of tax provisions. It assumes the existence of on true and correct standard of federal income taxation that applies to all circumstances. To make that a assumption, the proponents of the concept implicitly make a particular moral claim about the relative importance of a wide range of values, including efficiency, consumption/savings neutrality, privacy, distributional equity, administrabiliy, charity, and pragmatism. They then measure a tax provision's "normalcy" exclusively by how it conforms to their Platonic concept of income. …
Tax Expenditure Budgets: A Critical View, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Tax Expenditure Budgets: A Critical View, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey S. Lehman
Articles
During the past few months, Tax Notes has featured an extended discussion about the "normalcy" (or lack thereof) of accelerated depreciation. Two contributions to that discussion came from Professor Calvin Johnson of the University of Texas Law School, who disagreed with certain aspects of an article that Professor Kahn wrote in 1979. And the debate shows no sign of slowing down. The interchange over the details of accelerated depreciation offers a useful backdrop against which to consider a more general issue: the intellectual coherence of the tax expenditure budgets. The larger concept of tax expenditures was what motivated Kahn to …
Controlling Congress: Presidential Influence In Domestic Fiscal Policy, Michael A. Fitts, Robert Inman
Controlling Congress: Presidential Influence In Domestic Fiscal Policy, Michael A. Fitts, Robert Inman
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.