Claims and elections and Classical economics: Difference between pages

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''Tax''.
In classical economics individual market participants pursue their 'rational' self-interest, thereby maximising economic benefits for society as a whole.
 
National tax regimes often contain alternative rules, to help taxpayers to achieve the most tax efficient outcomes.
 
Sometimes they apply automatically, but in some cases it may be necessary to file a formal election or claim with the tax authority to use a more beneficial tax rule.
 
 
Tax claims and elections often have to be made in real time, i.e. before the tax computations are filed, so the organisation's tax specialists need high quality information at the time transactions are being planned and completed and not only at year end.
 




== See also ==
== See also ==
* [[Tax]]
* [[Agency]]
* [[Tax computation]]
* [[Behavioural economics]]
 
* [[Dunning-Kruger effect]]
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
* [[Emotional intelligence]]
* [[Game theory]]
* [[Fractal markets hypothesis]]
* [[Impostor syndrome]]
* [[Irrational]]
* [[Metaeconomics]]
* [[Neuroeconomics]]
* [[Technical analysis]]

Revision as of 13:49, 1 May 2018

In classical economics individual market participants pursue their 'rational' self-interest, thereby maximising economic benefits for society as a whole.


See also