Imputation system and Mutual fund: Difference between pages

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''Tax.'' 
A pool of capital provided by small as well as institutional investors and invested in a portfolio of securities.   
 
A system formerly used in the UK and most other EU countries, which wholly or partially imputes to the shareholders some of the corporation tax paid by companies on the income out of which dividends are paid. 
 
The mechanism for imputation is a tax credit given to the shareholders at the time of a dividend, which can be used in full or partial payment of the individual's income tax liability.
 
 
By contrast, 'classical system' tax rules - for example in the US - do not normally give any credit to individual investors for the corporate tax already paid by the corporations in which they have invested
 
This results in the effective double taxation of the related business profits.
 
 
The UK used an imputation system up to 2016.   
 
From 2016 onward, the UK has used a classical system.


There are two types of mutual funds: open-ended and close-ended mutual funds.  While close-ended mutual funds have a predetermined amount of capital to be invested, open-ended mutual funds do not.


== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Corporation Tax]]
* [[Capital]]
* [[Dividend]]
* [[Domestic fund]]
* [[EU]]
* [[Global fund]]
* [[Income Tax]]
* [[Tax credit]]


[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]

Revision as of 14:20, 23 October 2012

A pool of capital provided by small as well as institutional investors and invested in a portfolio of securities.

There are two types of mutual funds: open-ended and close-ended mutual funds. While close-ended mutual funds have a predetermined amount of capital to be invested, open-ended mutual funds do not.

See also