CCH's Federal Taxation: Comprehensive Topics is a popular teacher-created combination first- and second-level tax course that offers comprehensive one-volume coverage of all the most important tax concepts and principles for a solid grounding in federal taxation. It offers clear and concise explanation of fundamental tax concepts in the framework of today's tax practice. Covering both planning and compliance, the book strikes an effective balance between AICPA model curriculum demands and the favored approaches of the majority of today's top tax teachers.
Public Members : James H. Billington , Librarian of Congress ; John W. Carlin , Archivist of the United States ; Bruce ... Philip M. Condit , Denton A. Cooley , Gray Davis , Arturo Diaz , William H. Draper III , David Efron , Dianne ...
In this third edition, Brownlee adds four new chapters covering the colonial era, the American Revolution, the Civil War, the 1920s, and the post-1945 era including the tax policies of the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations.
Federal Taxation of Trusts, Grantors, and Beneficiaries: Income, Estate, Gift, Generation-skipping Transfer
Authoritative and readable, this book is the first historical overview of US federal tax systems published since 1967.
This fifth edition of Federal Tax Policy, like its predecessors, is intended to explain such issues so that the interested citizen may better understand and contribute to public discussion of...
Research in Federal Taxation
The third edition of The Fundamentals of Federal Taxation is a problem-based, transaction-oriented treatment of the basics of federal taxation. It features a balanced approach toward tax planning and tax...
Readings in Federal Taxation
This text provides comprehensive and authoritative coverage of the relevant code and regulations as they pertain to the individual taxpayer, as well as coverage of all major developments in federal taxation.
... in order to defer the recognition of gain on their target stock. The pressures that shape a transaction are, of course, not limited to a desire to avoid recognition of gain. A transaction's accounting treatment offers one example of ...