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Books on the topic 'Immovable property tax'

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1

Immovable property under VAT. Alphen aan den Rijn: Wolters Kluwer Law & Business, 2011.

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2

Pakistan. The Urban Immovable Property Tax Act, 1958: Containing the W.P. Urban Immovable property rules, 1958 ... Lahore: Irfan Law Book House, 2004.

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Pakistan. The Urban Immovable Property Tax Act, 1958: Containing the W.P. Urban Immovable property rules, 1958 ... Lahore: Irfan Law Book House, 2006.

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Pakistan. The Sindh Urban Immovable Property Tax act, 1958 with the Sindh urban immovable property tax rules, 1958 and allied laws. 2nd ed. Karachi: Pioneer Book House, 2001.

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Pakistan. Manual of property tax laws: With, Punjab urban local councils (immovable property tax) rules 1999 ... Lahore: Civil & Criminal Law Publications, 2003.

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6

Pakistan, ed. Manual of urban immovable property tax laws in Pakistan: With all amendments and up date case law. Lahore: Imran Law Books, 2014.

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7

Lal, Arjun K. Pre-emptive purchase and acquisition of immovable properties & flats by the Central Government under Income Tax Act, 1961. Bombay: Current Law Publishers, 1987.

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8

Norregaard, John. Taxing Immovable Property Revenue Potential and Implementation Challenges. International Monetary Fund, 2013.

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9

Norregaard, John. Taxing Immovable Property Revenue Potential and Implementation Challenges. International Monetary Fund, 2013.

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10

Norregaard, John. Taxing Immovable Property Revenue Potential and Implementation Challenges. International Monetary Fund, 2013.

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11

THAKOR, Anandkumar. Capital Gain Tax on the Event of Sale of Immovable Property. Independently Published, 2019.

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12

Simontacchi, Stefano. Taxation of Capital Gains Under the OECD Model Convention: With Special Regard to Immovable Property (Series on International Taxation). Kluwer Law International, 2007.

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13

Panayiotou, Panayiotis Andrea. Immovable property taxation and the development of an artificial neural network valuation sysytem for residential properties for tax purposes in Cyprus. 1999.

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14

2016 Federal tax guide. Arlington: Bloomberg BNA, 2015.

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15

Cnossen, Sijbren. Modernizing VATs in Africa. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198844075.001.0001.

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Tax revenues in most African countries fall far short of what is feasible and necessary to finance basic human and economic development. Domestic tax revenue mobilization is called for, preferably in the form of a broad-based consumption tax, such as the VAT, which is less detrimental to economic growth than an income tax is. Most African VATs, however, are riddled with exemptions, exclusions, and zero rates on domestic goods and services. Hence, base-broadening rather than rate-increasing should be pursued if revenue is the goal. Base-broadening would also make the VATs less distortionary and complicated. The case for base-broadening is strengthened by the findings of incidence studies that show that the net result of fiscal systems can be equalizing if the revenue from broad-based VATs is used to finance in-kind transfers, such as healthcare and education. This highly informative and well-researched book makes the case for modernizing African VAT systems by posing the following questions. What is the role and design of a best-practice VAT? Do African VATs measure up to best practice and how productive are they of revenue? What is being done to mitigate the VAT’s regressive burden distribution? How should VAT be coordinated in regional economic communities? What are non-standard exemptions and how prevalent are they? What treatment is accorded public bodies, immovable property, financial services, and insurance? How are and should small businesses and farmers be treated? Answers to these questions are explored by reference to best practice elsewhere and on the basis of detailed analyses of country-specific VATs.
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