Description of Tax Bills (S. 578, S. 768, S. 1276, and S. 1472): Scheduled for a Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Taxation and Debt Management of the Committee on Finance on September 25, 1981 |
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Under present law , a taxpayer may " write down " the value of its inventories ( thereby decreasing gross income in the year of writedown ) if the taxpayer uses the lower of cost or market method of inventory accounting or , in the case ...
Under present law , a taxpayer may " write down " the value of its inventories ( thereby decreasing gross income in the year of writedown ) if the taxpayer uses the lower of cost or market method of inventory accounting or , in the case ...
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The computation of cost of goods sold is made by taking the beginning inventory , adding the purchases made during ... The valuation method is important because a higher value will result in a lower cost of goods sold and thus greater ...
The computation of cost of goods sold is made by taking the beginning inventory , adding the purchases made during ... The valuation method is important because a higher value will result in a lower cost of goods sold and thus greater ...
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The computation of cost of goods sold is made by taking the beginning inventory , adding the purchases made during ... The valuation method is important because a higher value will result in a lower cost of goods sold and thus greater ...
The computation of cost of goods sold is made by taking the beginning inventory , adding the purchases made during ... The valuation method is important because a higher value will result in a lower cost of goods sold and thus greater ...
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Thus , when the value of an item of inventory declines below cost , a taxpayer using FIFO may write off the decline in value ( “ market writedowns ” ) and carry the inventory at its new lower value . Under LIFO , the taxpayer may not ...
Thus , when the value of an item of inventory declines below cost , a taxpayer using FIFO may write off the decline in value ( “ market writedowns ” ) and carry the inventory at its new lower value . Under LIFO , the taxpayer may not ...
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Common terms and phrases
$10 million limitation allow taxpayers amortize amount apply to taxable average beginning after December bill capital expenditures Code section conformity conformity requirement continue cost or market December 31 determined disposed disposition Effective date elects to deduct ending inventory exceeding exception excess inventory expenses experimental expenditures future gross income held higher income tax industrial development bonds interest Internal Revenue Service inven inventory accounting less LIFO lower of cost market value market writedowns method of accounting method of inventory months offered paid period Present law Proc provisions qualified small businesses realizable recapture regulations relating replacement requirement research and experimental research expenditures research expenses research or experimental respect Ruling Senators small issue industrial sold statement taken into account tax purposes taxable income taxable years beginning taxable years ending taxpayer elects Thor Power decision tion trade or business write written