Principles of Real Estate Accounting and Taxation
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.40 (777 Votes) |
Asin | : | 162661198X |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 272 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-07-07 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Professor Rosenfeld continues to act as a consultant in accounting and taxation real estate matters.. He is the author of the following articles: Section 1031, Tax Deferred Exchanges, Real Estate’s Best Kept Secret, and Tax Relief from Foreclosures and Cancellation of Indebtedness Issues. Before joining the faculty at New York University, Professor Rosenfeld was a senior partner of Mintz Rosenfeld & Company, Certified Public Accountants. This is the hard cover version of Principles of Real Estate Accounting and Taxation. The book includes the following features:Clear and concise chapters on taxationCase studies of typical real estate transactionsAnalysis of economic profitability, including tax implications of transactionsThe accounting sections of the book give students a better understanding of the accounting process that ultimately produces the financial statements critical in buying and selling real estate.Many books cover accounting or taxation. By addressing both areas, Principles of Real Estate Accounting and Taxation provides
Five Stars Amazon Customer Good one. Mr. John Kern said A very comprehensive and useful book, not a law school book. A very comprehensive and useful book, not a law school book.The book contains a lot of useful and accurate information on Real Estate Accounting and Taxation without being overly technical.This is the first book I have found which contains so much information which is necessary in one place.. An Expensive Mistake asdf Please do not waste the money that this book costs. It is EXTREMELY basic, it is your typical large font, basic book. Money would be better spend on an Accounting for Dummies book. It doesn't elaborate on anything. Let me give you an example. The taxation of depreciation recapture section is HALF a page long and it can be misleading/bordering on wrong, if you are relying on it in any sort of way. Large section of the book is dedicated just to talking a generalized overview of GAAP accounting.