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Books > Business & Economics > Finance & accounting > Finance > Public finance > Taxation
Introductory Questions on SA Tax 3rd edition is the first publication in the Questions on SA Tax series designed to provide comprehensive tutorial coverage to Taxation students. It covers foundational topics typically dealt with in the first year of the study of Tax at an undergraduate level.
This tutorial book includes questions and selected solutions on South African income tax and value-added tax. Up-to-date questions are graded, allowing students to develop their abilities at an introductory level.
A selection of tutorial solutions is included in the book, and solutions to all questions are provided to lecturers at prescribing institutions. Mark plans are allocated to solutions.
Questions on SA Tax 21st edition is the second publication in the Questions on SA Tax series designed to provide comprehensive tutorial coverage to taxation students. This book covers foundational topics and those typically dealt with in the study of tax at an undergraduate level.
This tutorial book includes questions and selected solutions on South African income tax, estate duty and value-added tax. Up-to-date questions are graded, allowing students to develop their abilities from an introductory to an advanced level. A selection of tutorial solutions is included in the book, and solutions to all questions are provided to lecturers at prescribing institutions.
Mark plans are allocated to solutions.
The objective of this title is to provide a book that simplifies the understanding and application of tax legislation in a South African context for both students and general tax practitioners.
Advanced Questions on SA Tax 6th edition is the third and final publication in the Question on SA Tax series designed to provide comprehensive tutorial coverage to taxation students. This book covers advanced topics and integrated questions.
Its complementary publications, Introductory Questions on SA Tax and Questions on SA Tax, cover foundational topics and those typically dealt with in the study of tax at an undergraduate level. This tutorial book includes questions and selected solutions on South African income tax, estate duty and value-added tax. Up-to-date questions are graded, allowing students to develop their abilities from an introductory to an advanced
level.
A selection of tutorial solutions is included in the book, and solutions to all questions are provided to lecturers at prescribing institutions. Mark plans are allocated to solutions.
This book surveys recent developments in public economics by taking
as a case-study the proposals for a basic income/flat tax scheme.
It discusses various approaches to taxation and presents a
framework for a system that would affect both personal income and
the social security system, replacing the one by a flat-rate income
tax and the other by a guaranteed income. This idea has generated
wide interest in a number of countries, and is being actively
discussed by several political parties. This book explains how
these changes would benefit a wide variety of social groups,
leading to a greater redistribution of income. At the same time, it
also raises the question of whether a single reform can meet the
very different objectives of different supporters. The author
reviews different areas of public economics in which there has been
active research in recent years- namely the theory of optimum
taxation, public choice theory, general equilibrium analysis of
incidence, numerical tax- benefit modelling, and econometric
studies of work incentives-and asks how these contribute to our
understanding of this particular policy reform. He also indicates
the promising directions for future research. The author does not
argue for or against the basic income/flat tax proposal, but
believes it should be on the agenda for any serious discussion of
tax and social security reform for the twenty-first century.
I believe that in the near future, the issue of taxation will
become more widely discussed at all levels of government and this
will include the possibility of a land value tax (LVT). At the same
time, the majority of ordinary taxpayers, who may be otherwise very
well informed, have probably never heard of it. This book is
therefore an educational book aimed at filling this gap in our
knowledge. It is aimed at those people who have no particular
knowledge of economics or taxation but who wish to know what LVT is
and how it works. The book is based on the information and data
that I have collected over many years for my website:
http://landvaluetaxguide.com The contemporary formulation of LVT
owes its origin in the publication, in 1879, of Progress and
Poverty by the American economic philosopher, Henry George. His
book gave rise to a worldwide movement that reached its peak with
reformist governments in the first decade of the 20th century. LVT
thereafter became overshadowed by the preference of governments for
the income tax and also by the organised opposition of vested
interests, who saw it as a threat to their source of unearned
income. But, in recent years, many economists, academics and
politicians have begun to see the failures of the current
neoclassical/neoliberal economic system and are seriously
reconsidering LVT as an alternative. For a list of LVT supporters
over recent years refer to:
http://landvaluetaxguide.com/category/supporters/ The book
comprises an introduction, thirteen chapters and three appendices
with supplementary information. References are collected in several
pages of endnotes and the text is fully indexed. I present the case
for taxation in general as a 'good' not the 'necessary evil' that
many people appear to believe. But it has to be accepted that there
are good and bad taxes - measured in accordance with the degree of
benefit or harm they may give rise to in their application. This
book is an explanation of why LVT may be seen as a beneficial tax.
I suggest that we would better understand taxes if we viewed them
more as contributions towards the proper functioning of society. In
the explanation I make use of diagrams, which take the reader step
by step through the evolution of a society from simple beginnings
to the development of a complex city, how land values arise in this
process, and why they become a proper basis for a system of
taxation. I suggest that throughout history there have always been
the same three problems that beset the tax collector:
identification, measurement and avoidance. The book shows how a
land value tax would be effective in resolving these three issues
that remain problems to this day. I examine the issue of private
landownership and I suggest that this has historically been the
basis of much economic injustice. In England, it began with the
Norman conquest and became consolidated and legitimised over the
centuries, so that now the concept is virtually sacrosanct. The
title of the book is taken from John of Gaunt's 'sceptre'd isle'
speech, in Shakespeare's Richard II, in which he laments the king's
selling of land leases to finance his campaign in Ireland.
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