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Should governments provide more information on their economic conditions? How should changes in the fair value of government investments be measured? Is the Statement 34 reporting model working well enough?Such questions being crucial to financial reporting by government entities, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board has put out a call for proposals for research projects. Offering up to $5,000 per project, the board is seeking input on several questions relating to three general issues:
October 1 -
-- The Financial Accounting Standards Board has released a standard that, in essence, would shuttle obligations of pension and defined benefit plans to the balance sheets instead of often being submerged in footnotes.
October 1 -
Alan Haft is the president of 5th Avenue Financial, a financial planning firm based in Boca Raton, Florida. He is a pretty savvy guy when it comes to financial planning and recently set forth what he considers the five biggest financial retirement planning mistakes that Baby Boomers make. At the outset, he says that most Baby Boomers, and even retirees, realize rather quickly that their so-called bulletproof retirement savings plan is actually riddled with bullet holes. To Haft, living longer could mean outliving nest eggs that were intended to secure that financial comfort zone. Haft is well known in helping the wealthy become even wealthier and the not-so-wealthy achieve financial security. “Most of what I’ve seen in the industry in terms of poor retirement planning,” he says, “involves improper guidance or self-guidance, and a lack of foresight.” Here are what he considers the five biggest mistakes in such planning: 1) It’s Too Late to Start Planning. Once you reach your 50s or 60s, many people think that the parade has passed them by. But Half points to the power of compounding, boosted by the tax-deferred growth offered by IRAs, 401(k) plans, and the like. So, building up that nest egg may not be too late. 2) Underestimating Life Expectancy. He says studies show that some 20 percent of workers expect their retirement to last 10 years or less but according to the 2000 Retirement Confidence Survey by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), half of the men reaching age 65 have an additional life expectancy of some 17 years while half of the women reaching that age are spun out 21 years. 3) Miscalculating Needs. Most financial planners say that you must plan on needing 60-85 percent of your pre-retirement income in your retirement years. According to that EBRI survey, only 53 percent of workers have tried to determine how much money they’ll need in retirement. 4) Looking at Inflation. Many investors, Haft says, particularly older ones, are uncomfortable with market volatility. They invest solely in Treasury bills, fixed-rate CDs, and savings accounts. He feels it is important to consider keeping some money in growth investments such as stocks and stock mutual funds. 5) Putting Other Financial Goals First. Haft points out that to many people, retirement probably isn’t the only financial goal--not when you may be saving for a child’s college education or for a down payment on a second home. But he cautions not to place them ahead of a financially secure retirement. Of course, easier said than done.
September 28 -
A slow response to a Freedom of Information Act request has lead the L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center to sue the Internal Revenue Service. The center said that the documents requested in March 2005 are related to the rejection of its application for non-profit status in the early 1970s. In the court filing, the center accuses the IRS of attempting to “cover up its misconduct,” while chief executive Lorri Jean has said members are interested in reviewing the documents as a historical exercise. In October 2005, the center said it had received a written response to its information request from the IRS, which said that the documents had been located and were being reviewed by the IRS Office of Collection Policy. Since then, the center has not received any updates on its request. According to the center, then operating as the "Gay Community Services Center," it was the first organization with the word "gay" in its name to apply for non-profit status from the federal government. That application was rejected on the grounds that the center was not "organized and operated exclusively for charitable and educational purposes." Following several appeals, the IRS eventually awarded the center non-profit standing in August 1974, but included a number of caveats -- including that the center would not "contend that homosexuality is normal" and that the center's officers and directors not be “avowed homosexuals." Among the documents requested on behalf of the center are all records analyzing, discussing or considering its original 501(c)(3) application; a copy of the original IRS denial letter; all records in conjunction with the original denial letter; and all records in conjunction with the later IRS approval letter. The lawsuit requests that the court order the IRS to produce the requested records, provide a detailed explanation of why the requested documents were withheld and reimburse the center for its legal fees.
September 28 -
A sampling of tax returns filed by fishermen in 2004 revealed that thousands of workers had overpaid an average of $530, after failing to take advantage of the averaging provision in calculating their income tax liability. According to the report from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, more than 4,600 taxpayers -- about 90 percent of the fishermen who could have benefited from the averaging provision -- didn't take advantage of the provision included the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004. TIGTA said that the overpaid taxes for the individual returns filed during the 2004 tax year totaled more than $2.4 million; and a startling 90 percent of the fishermen’s returns were prepared by paid tax preparers. The 2004 law allows fishermen to elect to compute their tax liabilities by averaging all, or a portion, of their taxable fishing income from the prior three years. The measure was designed to help fishermen recover from low-income years by keeping more of their income in successful years and offsetting potentially high tax burdens in isolated years. At the time of its enactment, the Joint Committee on Taxation estimated the provision could save fishermen up to $61 million in taxes over the next decade -- between $3 million and $10 million annually. During a prior audit, TIGTA noted that less than one half of taxpayers who could benefit from a similar provision for farmers, had actually taken advantage of the measure. The inspector general recommended to a variety of federal offices that a better and broader effort be made to educate both fishermen and tax preparers about the averaging provision. The full report is available at www.treas.gov/tigta/auditreports/2006reports/200630158fr.pdf.
September 28 -
The Internal Revenue Service has issued details on the process for military reservists called to active duty to receive payments from individual retirement accounts, 401(k) plans and 403(b) tax-sheltered annuities, without penalities.
September 28 -
Three former executives at a Bermuda-based reinsurer are facing fraudulent accounting charges from the Securities and Exchange Commission.
September 28 -
A Boston-based investment fund has received the go-ahead from a state court in Virginia to move ahead with a $51 million lawsuit against accounting firm Goodman & Co. LLP.
September 27 -
The fugitive former chief executive of voicemail software manufacturer Comverse Technology Inc. was tracked down in Namibia, Africa, this week after spending the past two months on the lamb. Jacob ''Kobi'' Alexander, 54, was charged in August with conspiracy related to backdating stock options by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Two other defendants, former Comverse finance chief David Kreinberg and former senior general counsel William Sorin, surrendered in August and were each released on $1 million bonds. Before he disappeared, Alexander allegedly transferred $57 million to Israel, prompting speculation that he may have fled there. The SEC complaint accuses the trio of men of profiting from stock options by backdating prices to a low point in the stock's value. From 1991 through 2005, Alexander reportedly exercised options and sold stocks worth approximately $150 million, making $138 million profit -- about $6 million by backdating options -- according to the complaint. Kreinberg and Sorin each also earned about $1 million on backdated options. In addition, the SEC alleges that the company awarded thousands of stock options to fictional employees, then secretly transferred the awards to an internal account. The scheme allowed Alexander to award those options to employees and himself without board of directors approval.
September 27 -
Two major players in the accounting scandals at energy giant Enron Corp. and telecom powerhouse WorldCom Corp. moved a step closer to punishment for their crimes.
September 26