Alternative minimum tax
(View Complete Item Description)The basics of the alternative minimum tax. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
The basics of the alternative minimum tax. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
Problem based accounting learning activity for notes and interest payable, sales tax payable, and payroll.
Material Type: Activity/Lab
Overview of the estate tax. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
Traditional finance and other business courses analyze a broad spectrum of factors affecting business decision-making but typically give little systematic consideration to the role of taxes. In contrast, traditional tax accounting courses concentrate on administrative issues while ignoring the richness of the context in which tax factors operate. The objective of the course is to bridge this gap by providing a framework for recognizing tax planning opportunities and applying basic principles of tax strategy.
Material Type: Full Course
This book is the 7th edition of a basic income tax text. This edition incorporates the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. It is intended to be a readable text, suitable for a three-hour course for a class comprised of law students with widely different backgrounds. The text integrates several of the CALI drills that Professor James Edward Maule (Villanova University) prepared.
Material Type: Textbook
If you were a government official trying to raise revenue, who would you tax? Pick whether to tax cigarettes, luxury goods, or oil and gas in this interactive game and Professor Art Carden of Samford University will explain how the market will react.
Material Type: Game, Lecture
Introduction about the Income Tax.
Material Type: Lecture Notes
Taxes are part of daily life in the United States. The activities included in this lesson plan introduce ESL students to income taxes, the important date for submission of income tax returns, and the simple forms most students will need to complete. A variety of materials and resources are provided.
Material Type: Lesson Plan
How a corporation can set up a tax haven and use it through transfer pricing. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
PowerPoint's originally created to assist deaf students to interpret supply and demand graphs, as they relate to elasticity of demand and tax incidence.
Material Type: Module
How to calculate state taxes and take-home pay.Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
Understanding that a marginal tax rate does not apply to all of income. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
This example focuses on six letters to the editor. All six letters attempt to describe and compare the amount of taxes paid on two different incomes: $30,000 and $200,000. Tax rates are expressed in absolute dollars, tax per $1,000 of income, $1 of tax per income amount, and as percents of annual income. Students need to be able to organize the relevant information and convert each stated tax rate to a standard form to help make comparisons. Additionally, students need to be aware that letter writers may make their own mistakes!
Material Type: Activity/Lab
We keep hearing that the wealthy pay a disproportionate share of our taxes. Do the rich pay too much tax? We can't answer that question without looking at how income is distributed. It turns out that tax payments are unequal because income is unequal. Even if we taxed everyone at exactly the same rate, the rich would still have huge tax payments - because they're the ones making the most income.
Material Type: Lecture
This resource is a video abstract of a research paper created by Research Square on behalf of its authors. It provides a synopsis that's easy to understand, and can be used to introduce the topics it covers to students, researchers, and the general public. The video's transcript is also provided in full, with a portion provided below for preview: "Can your country’s tax laws help you find true love? A research team based in Europe has found that a government’s tax scheme surrounding marriage could affect a couple’s decision to tie the knot. The majority of countries across the globe have a tax code that changes according to marital status -- usually in the form of either a tax penalty or tax bonus. With a penalty, a couple will end up paying more in taxes than two similarly compensated single individuals, and with a bonus, they will pay less. To get to the heart of whether the financial implications connected to such tax laws influence a couple’s desire to get married, the researchers applied a rigorous theoretical model they called the marriage proposal game. In the game, two potential spouses – Sam and Robin – can either get married, live together without formal marriage, or break up..." The rest of the transcript, along with a link to the research itself, is available on the resource itself.
Material Type: Diagram/Illustration, Reading
The spending multiplier and tax multiplier will cause a $1 change in spending or taxes to lead to further changes in AD and aggregate output. The spending multiplier is always 1 greater than the tax multiplier because with taxes some of the initial impact of the tax is saved, which is not true of the spending multiplier.
Material Type: Lesson
This is a picture story and worksheets to help low level English language learners understand how to get help will filing their taxes and what documents are needed.
Material Type: Diagram/Illustration, Homework/Assignment, Interactive, Primary Source
How government can effect aggregate demand through tax policy. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson
Tax incidence is a description of how the burden of a tax falls in a market. In this video we break down how to identify consumer surplus, producer surplus, tax revenue and tax incidence, and dead weight loss after a tax.
Material Type: Lesson
An interesting case of taxes and tax incidence is when one of the curves is perfectly elastic. Explore what happens when demand is perfectly elastic in this video. Created by Sal Khan.
Material Type: Lesson