"Quick reference guide to taxes levied by state of Kentucky, including personal income tax, corporate income tax, corporate license (franchise) tax, financial institutions (franchise) tax, sales and use tax, property taxes, estate and gift tax, unemployment taxes, and other state and local taxes. Reflects significant new, legislation and regulations, as well as significant court decisions and administrative rulings. Also includes sections on practice and procedure and doing business in Kentucky. Practitioner commentary provided by Mark F. Sommer, J. D. of Greenbam Doll & McDonald."
"Quick reference guide to state and local taxes in the state of New York, focusing on legislative and regulatory developments and highlighting significant new cases and administrative rulings. Areas covered include: personal income tax, corporation franchise (income) tax franchise taxes on banking corporations, sales and use taxes, estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer taxes, property taxes, excise taxes and unemployment compensation. Also includes New York City and yonkers taxes. Sections on administration and procedure and doing business in New York are also included. Practitioner commentary provided by Mark S. Klein, Hodgson & Russ LLP."
"Quick reference guide for all taxes levied by the state of California, including personal, income, corporate income, inheritance, gift, sales and use and property taxes. Reflects significant new legislation, regulations, court decisions and state board of equalization decisions. Also compares California state taxes with federal and illustrates differences. Includes helpful tables, such as federal to California cross reference tables, table of franchise board legal rulings and board notices, California. Tax forms and related federa forms. Tax rate tables are also included."
Contains extensive coverage of the tax issues faced by all types of contractors, including large and small contractors, homebuilders, and other specialty trades, provides you with the clear, concise guidance you need to expertly address your tax issues.
Since Kentucky is situated at a biological crossroads in eastern North America, citizens and visitors to this beautiful state are likely to be greeted by an astonishing variety of wildflowers. This non-technical guide—featuring more than five hundred dazzling full-color photographs by award-winning photographer Thomas G. Barnes—is the state's indispensable guide to the most common species in the Commonwealth. With this book, readers will learn to identify and appreciate Kentucky wildflowers and ferns by matching photographs and leaf line drawings to the more than six hundred and fifty species of flowers covered in the book. Extremely practical and simple to use, the guide's color photographs and line drawings appear with plant descriptions for easy identification, and plants are grouped by flower color and blooming season. Each species listing includes the plant's common and scientific name, plant family, habitat, frequency, and distribution throughout Kentucky, with similar species listed in the notes. There is no other volume that covers the flora of Kentucky with such ease of identification. The first new statewide guide to appear in thirty years, with its combination of high quality photographs, illustrations, portability, and easy organization of information, Wildflowers and Ferns of Kentucky is an essential addition to the library or field pack of the wildflower enthusiast, naturalist, and anyone else who loves the outdoors.
"Quick reference guide to state and local taxes in the state of New York, focusing on legislative and regulatory developments and highlighting significant new cases and administrative rulings. Areas covered include: personal income tax, corporation franchise (income) tax franchise taxes on banking corporations, sales and use taxes, estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer taxes, property taxes, excise taxes and unemployment compensation. Also includes New York City and yonkers taxes. Sections on administration and procedure and doing business in New York are also included. Practitioner commentary provided by Mark S. Klein, Hodgson & Russ LLP."
The State Economic Handbook is a new annual reference book profiling the economy, demography, political environment, and business climates for each of the 50 states. This information, gathered from a variety of sources and clearly presented in one volume, will be of great value to researchers, businesses, news media, and government agencies.
Straightforward, reliable financial guidance is contained in this one-of-a-kind reference. This handbook clearly explains the concepts you need to invest, borrow, or lend intelligently with reduced risk and greater understanding. Here are the ready answers to virtually all of your questions about interest, yields, and returns, whether you are an investor trying to decide which kind of bond to invest in, a business manager evaluating alternative prospective capital investment opportunities using discounted cash flow techniques such as the internal rate of return (IRR), a senior citizen pondering increasing his or her cash flow by taking out a "reverse" mortgage, a borrower who is unsure whether refinancing is a good idea, and an individual who simply wants to make financial decisions that pay off. This valuable handbook provides you with the analytical tools essential to making decisions about buying, selling, or holding stocks, bonds, and real estate. Or if you are lending or borrowing money, you will find the information necessary to compare different forms of investment proposals by using the IRR or net present value as simple, accurate yardsticks. In the Handbook, you will find answers to such other vital questions as: . Why does the Fed's annual percentage rate understate the true cost of most loans? How can you make tax shelters work for you? Why don't you have to reinvest at all to achieve the IRR or yield-to-maturity at purchase? What are the big dangers of investing in callable or zero coupon bonds? Which kind of bond is most desirable: discount, par, or premium? What is the most you can withdraw monthly from your retirement savings and still have the income last for yourexpected life span? How can you construct a loan amortization schedule? Is it advisable to accelerate paying off your mortgage or other loan? What is modified duration, and how can it help control a portfolio's risk level? The Handbook is written in a no-nonsense style that makes its subject accessible to a broad spectrum of readers. In addition, you will find numerous graphs that will help solve even the most complex money puzzles in moments. If you are among the investors, borrowers, portfolio managers, bankers, accountants, and business professionals who must grapple with financial decision making in an uncertain business climate, you will find this one-stop guide to be your invaluable financial coach, ever at your aide with dependable and practical information presented in a lucid, easily understood manner. With this handbook, you'll make informed, advantageous money decisions.
The federal government wastes your tax dollars worse than a drunken sailor on shore leave. The 1984 Grace Commission uncovered that the Department of Defense spent $640 for a toilet seat and $436 for a hammer. Twenty years later things weren't much better. In 2004, Congress spent a record-breaking $22.9 billion dollars of your money on 10,656 of their pork-barrel projects. The war on terror has a lot to do with the record $413 billion in deficit spending, but it's also the result of pork over the last 18 years the likes of: - $50 million for an indoor rain forest in Iowa - $102 million to study screwworms which were long ago eradicated from American soil - $273,000 to combat goth culture in Missouri - $2.2 million to renovate the North Pole (Lucky for Santa!) - $50,000 for a tattoo removal program in California - $1 million for ornamental fish research Funny in some instances and jaw-droppingly stupid and wasteful in others, The Pig Book proves one thing about Capitol Hill: pork is king!