Tax Subluxation
Autor: | Jay Malik |
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EAN: | 9781939243027 |
eBook Format: | ePUB |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Produktart: | eBook |
Veröffentlichungsdatum: | 15.12.2012 |
Untertitel: | A Chiropractor's Guide to Reducing Tax Legally |
Kategorie: | |
Schlagworte: | Accounting for Chiropractors Financial Planning for Chiropr Tax Planning for Chiropractors Tax for Chiropractors |
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Tax Subluxation - A Chiropractor's Guide to Reducing Tax Legally by Jay Malik is written exclusively for chiropractors so that they can adjust the amount they pay in taxes legally, staying within the US tax law and its interpretation by the IRS and the courts. Because tax is one of the main expenses for most chiropractors, its reduction goes a long way towards providing financial independence for these busy professionals and helping them achieve their financial goals. The simple and plain language in this book explains the four major tax mistakes made by chiropractors and their tax professionals that result in their paying tens of thousands of dollars in taxes that are not required. It provides a solution that enables chiropractors to avoid making these mistakes so that they can benefit from the opportunities already available in the US Tax code. It also explains why these tax loopholes are missed or under-used. Jay's book is free of the usual accountant gobbledygook. Its concepts are explained in an understandable manner because after all, chiropractors are not financial experts; they are healers. It refrains from making things more complicated than they need to be. The practical nature of Tax Subluxation comes from the author's accomplishments as an expert in the field as an active accountant with a number of chiropractor clients. He understands the challenges of working with chiropractors and explains the reasons why they have the problems that they do. Jay's book is unique because it identifies one solution for a multitude of problems. Because chiropractors are not trained to handle the financial demands of a busy practice, and have neither the time not the expertise to keep abreast of ever-changing tax laws, the book refrains from prescribing self-help solutions. Tax overpayment problems of chiropractors are simply too complex to be tackled by the chiropractors themselves. The book's approach is opposite of that which most accountants take, i.e, working afte