Receivable put and Tax incentive: Difference between pages

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imported>Doug Williamson
(Create the page. Source: The Treasurer, February 2016, page 45.)
 
(Create page. Sources: Linked pages.)
 
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A right to deliver receivables to a bank in the event of default by a buyer.
1.  ''Tax and treasury''.


The predetermined purchase price can be 100% of the coverage amount, or a predetermined discounted amount.
Tax incentives usually are tax-beneficial legal structures, designated physical locations, investments, activities, financial arrangements or instruments that are intended by the revenue authority attract exemption from - or reduced liability to - different forms of taxation.


Tax incentives are designed by the tax rule-setting authorities to encourage particular wanted activities, contrasted with unintended tax "loopholes" and over-aggressive tax planning.


==See also==
 
*[[Credit risk]]
This kind of tax incentives are also known informally as ''tax breaks''.
*[[Receivables]]
 
*[[Put]]
 
2.
 
Additional tax - or less favourable tax treatment - attaching to activities, or omissions, that the tax rule-setting authority wants to discourage.
 
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Advance tax ruling]]
* [[Business rates]]
* [[Capital Gains Tax]]
* [[Capital tax]]
* [[Carbon tax]]
* [[Charge]]
* [[Claims and elections]]
* [[Cliff edge]]
*[[Code]]
* [[Concession]]
* [[Corporation Tax]]
* [[Customs duty]]
* [[Determination]]
* [[Direct tax]]
*[[Directive]]
* [[Double tax treaties]]
* [[Double taxation]]
* [[Duty]]
*[[Ethics]]
* [[Federal Corporate Income Tax]]
* [[Foreign tax credit]]
*[[Framework]]
* [[Global minimum corporate tax rate]]
*[[Good practice]]
*[[Governance]]
*[[Guidance]]
* [[Incentive]]
* [[Income Tax]]
* [[Indirect tax]]
* [[Inheritance tax]]
* [[Internal Revenue Code]]  (IRC)
* [[Jurisdiction]]
* [[Landfill Tax]]
* [[Law]]
* [[Legislation]]
* [[Levy]]
* [[Marginal rate of tax]]
* [[National Insurance ]]
* [[OECD model tax convention]]
* [[Output tax]]
* [[Payroll tax]]
* [[Preferential tax regime]]
*[[Principle]]
* [[Profit after tax]]
* [[Profit before tax]]
* [[Regime]]
* [[Regulation]]
*[[Reporting]]
*[[Reputational risk]]
*[[Rules]]
* [[Sales Tax]]
*[[Standards]]
* [[Stealth tax]]
* [[Supertax]]
* [[Surcharge]]
* [[Tax]]
* [[Tax arbitrage]]
* [[Tax avoidance]]
* [[Tax base]]
* [[Tax compliance]]
* [[Tax credit]]
* [[Tax depreciation]]
* [[Tax evasion]]
* [[Tax harmonisation]]
* [[Tax haven]]
* [[Tax planning]]
* [[Tax rate]]
* [[Tax relief]]
* [[Tax risk]]
* [[Tax ruling]]
* [[Tax shelter]]
* [[Tax shield]]
* [[Tax yield]]
* [[Treasury]]
* [[Trust]]
* [[UK Bank Levy]]
* [[Value Added Tax]]  (VAT)
* [[Wealth tax]]
* [[Withholding tax]]
 
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]]
[[Category:Financial_products_and_markets]]

Revision as of 19:17, 28 January 2024

1. Tax and treasury.

Tax incentives usually are tax-beneficial legal structures, designated physical locations, investments, activities, financial arrangements or instruments that are intended by the revenue authority attract exemption from - or reduced liability to - different forms of taxation.

Tax incentives are designed by the tax rule-setting authorities to encourage particular wanted activities, contrasted with unintended tax "loopholes" and over-aggressive tax planning.


This kind of tax incentives are also known informally as tax breaks.


2.

Additional tax - or less favourable tax treatment - attaching to activities, or omissions, that the tax rule-setting authority wants to discourage.


See also