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verified
View Answer
Short Answer
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) incurred for the production of investment income
B) ordinary and necessary
C) minimized
D) appropriate and measurable
E) personal and justifiable
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verified
True/False
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verified
True/False
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verified
Short Answer
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) $1,000 spent on compensating your brother for a personal expense.
B) $50 spent on meals while traveling on business.
C) $2,000 spent by the employer on reimbursing an employee for entertainment.
D) All of these expenses are fully deductible.
E) None of these expenses can be deducted in full.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) Meals, lodging, and incidental expenditures are only deductible if the taxpayer is away from home overnight while traveling.
B) Meals are deductible for an employee who is forced to work during the lunch hour.
C) When a taxpayer travels solely for business purposes, only half of the costs of travel are deductible.
D) If travel has both business and personal aspects, the cost of transportation is always deductible but the deductibility of lodging depends upon whether business is conducted that day.
E) None of these is true.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) An impermissible method is adopted by using the method to report results for two consecutive years.
B) An impermissible method may never be used by a taxpayer.
C) Cash method accounting is an impermissible method for partnerships and Subchapter S electing corporations.
D) There is no accounting method that is impermissible.
E) None of these is true.
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Multiple Choice
A) Jim can defer the recognition of the income if he absolutely promises not to provide the services until next year.
B) Jim must defer the recognition of the income until the income is earned.
C) Jim can defer the recognition of the income if he has requested that the client not pay for the services until the services are provided.
D) Jim can elect to defer the recognition of the income if the income is not recognized for financial accounting purposes.
E) Jim can never defer the recognition of the prepayments of income.
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verified
True/False
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verified
Short Answer
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verified
View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) $23,000
B) $3,000
C) $26,000
D) $5,000
E) $20,000
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verified
True/False
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verified
True/False
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) $540
B) $415
C) $270
D) None unless Holly discussed business with the client during the meal and the entertainment.
E) None - the meals and entertainment are not deductible except during travel.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) 1 only.
B) 2 only.
C) 3 only.
D) 4 only.
E) None of these.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) $12,000 because rebates are payment liabilities.
B) $19,500 because Big Homes is an accrual method taxpayer.
C) $19,500 if this amount is not material, Big Homes expects to continue the practice of offering rebates in future years, and Big Homes expects to pay the accrued rebates before filing their tax return for this year.
D) $12,000 because the $7,500 liability is not fixed and determinable.
E) Big Homes is not entitled to a deduction because rebates are against public policy.
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verified
True/False
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