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Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Tax in real life

Posted on 08:23 by Unknown
We signed the papers to sell our house on Monday, April 19, to our tremendous relief. They had talked about closing on April 15, but fortunately we got an extra couple of days.

While going through the papers, I of course perked up at the tax related stuff, whereas my husband's eyes glazed over. On the form related to the 1099-S (which reports the proceeds), we had to indicate whether we met the qualifications for exclusion of gain on the sale of a principal residence. I admit, I felt very smart when I said to my husband, "This is to determine whether gain qualifies for exclusion under section 121."

I like that, having seen hundreds of escrow statements over the years, I know exactly what I'm looking at when it's my escrow statement. This was one of the many times I'm grateful to know what I do.

The world, especially the world of tax and finance, is a complicated place. Last night, I taught a group of Boy Scouts a little about finance and tax. It was fun, and the kids really responded to it. As many leading thinkers have said before, most young people are not taught about tax and finance. (See James Maule, Marjorie Kornhauser, Taxgirl to name just a few.)

I believe that technology is helping with education, though I don't know if we'll see real progress until society as a whole makes financial education a priority. For my part, I'll just keep teaching small groups where I can, and hopefully spread some financial know-how along the way.

In the end, I think Schoolhouse Rock said it best. Knowledge is power.

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Wednesday, 21 October 2009

Principles vs. rules

Posted on 11:24 by Unknown
I finally finished my CPE course on IFRS, which wasn't nearly as painful as one might expect. As Joe Kristan put it: "We're tax! We don't need no stinkin' AA!" (For those new to public accounting, "AA" refers to Accounting & Auditing.)

As a tax practitioner, I could opt to renew my license under the non-attestation category. I take the AA courses because I want to keep the "full fledged" license as long as I can. I keep wrestling up 24 AA education hours every two years, since I figure the hard part's over, which was getting the field work hours for initial licensure.

Based on my limited AA education, I understand that IFRS is a principles-based framework, compared to the rules-based U.S. GAAP. This is an interesting experiment in human behavior, and I look forward to seeing how it unfolds. Can a system based on trust in people to use sound judgment and act ethically be successful? I hope so, though I admit to some skepticism.

I've said before that we cannot regulate human behavior, and so should not over-regulate society; and at the same time we still must have some semblance of law and order. The challenge, of course lies in finding where to land on the spectrum between trusting everyone do just do what's right and forcing them to.

Will we start to see a corresponding move in tax policy toward a system of principles rather than rules? I doubt it. And although I do like Joe Kristan's suggestion to simply pass a "happy fun times tax credit" for everything to be wonderful, I'm thinking the path to getting people to behave morally may be a little harder than that.

But maybe I'm just being difficult.
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