Exempt gain and Rounding: Difference between pages

From ACT Wiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigationJump to search
imported>Doug Williamson
m (Changed see also Capital Gains Tax to initial capitals to see if this would fix broken link 23/10/13)
 
imported>Doug Williamson
m (Add 'the' for clarity.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
''UK Tax.'' 
Rounding is a reduction in the accuracy to which numbers are displayed, in order to make them easier to understand.


A capital gain which is wholly or partly exempt from capital gains tax.  
Excel has an Advanced option whether to calculate to full accuracy, or only to the displayed accuracy.


Examples include an individual's principal private residence, and gilts.
 
 
== Round don't truncate ==
It's better practice to figures for presentation, rather than truncating them.
For example:
1.0049988 is expressed to 7 decimal places.
 
Rounding 1.0049988 off to fewer than 7 decimal places, it becomes:
*1.004999 to 6 decimal places (NOT 1.004998)
*1.00500 to 5 decimal places (not 1.00499)
*1.0050 to 4 decimal places (not 1.0049)
*1.005 to 3 decimal places (not 1.004)
 
If you truncate a final result instead of rounding it, it is not a strictly correct presentation.
It's also important not to truncate the results of intermediate workings.
 
Doing that introduces errors into your final results.
 
 
 
== Rounding errors ==
Even rounding correctly in intermediate workings introduces errors in final results.
 
The only way to avoid rounding errors is to keep full accuracy in the intermediate workings.




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Capital Gains Tax]]
* [[Excel]]
* [[Gilts]]
* [[CertFMM]]
 
[[Category:Taxation]]

Revision as of 16:52, 3 April 2015

Rounding is a reduction in the accuracy to which numbers are displayed, in order to make them easier to understand.

Excel has an Advanced option whether to calculate to full accuracy, or only to the displayed accuracy.


Round don't truncate

It's better practice to figures for presentation, rather than truncating them.

For example: 1.0049988 is expressed to 7 decimal places.


Rounding 1.0049988 off to fewer than 7 decimal places, it becomes:

  • 1.004999 to 6 decimal places (NOT 1.004998)
  • 1.00500 to 5 decimal places (not 1.00499)
  • 1.0050 to 4 decimal places (not 1.0049)
  • 1.005 to 3 decimal places (not 1.004)


If you truncate a final result instead of rounding it, it is not a strictly correct presentation.

It's also important not to truncate the results of intermediate workings.

Doing that introduces errors into your final results.


Rounding errors

Even rounding correctly in intermediate workings introduces errors in final results.

The only way to avoid rounding errors is to keep full accuracy in the intermediate workings.


See also