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UK Taxation - a simplified guide for students: Finance Act 2021 edition 7th New edition


UK Taxation - a simplified guide for students: Finance Act 2021 edition 7th New edition

Paperback by Hunt, Mark

UK Taxation - a simplified guide for students: Finance Act 2021 edition

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£25.50

ISBN:
9781913507176
Publication Date:
09 Aug 2021
Edition:
7th New edition
Publisher:
Spiramus Press
Pages:
318 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 2 - 4 May 2024
UK Taxation - a simplified guide for students: Finance Act 2021 edition

Description

UK Taxation for Students assumes absolutely no prior knowledge of UK taxation. It is completely self-contained covering the main areas of taxation studied at undergraduate level and initially for many professional exams. It can be used to support other texts and includes all the various allowances, tax rates etc. that a student may need at the front of the book. It is written in a user-friendly manner, avoiding tax jargon and using, wherever possible, plain and straightforward English. It includes numerous examples throughout the text designed to illustrate particular points and then provides further examples for you to try in Appendix 2. Appendix 3 includes over 100 True or False questions for you to dip into at any time to test your understanding. Appendix 1 I contains suggested some tips for studying tax. This book covers the main UK taxes; income tax (paid by individuals), capital gains tax (paid by individuals), corporation tax (paid by companies), value added tax (levied on consumers by businesses), inheritance tax (normally payable on the death of an individual) and National Insurance Contributions. Although primarily aimed at students studying at undergraduate level, these are the taxes that typically form the core of the syllabus for most of the UK's professional examinations in taxation such as those of the ACCA, AAT and possibly ATT, although no specific professional syllabus has been followed. In general, each of the chapters should be read through in the order that they are arranged as later chapters often assume knowledge from earlier chapters. Having said this, the Value Added Tax and Inheritance Tax chapters could be studied at any point, as a standalone as both are very different from the other taxes studied.

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