by Scott Nelson | Feb 13, 2018 | accounting, compliance, FASB Topic 832, government incentives, tax incentives
2018 update of this Infographic: the objective of FASB Topic 832 is to develop disclosure requirements about government assistance, also known as tax credits & incentives – this Infographic depicts a timeline of where this project originated as well as its projected completion date.
by Scott Nelson | Jan 20, 2018 | innovation, site selection, tax incentives, tax technology
The site selection process is one of the most significant aspects of opening a new facility or corporate location. When companies are deciding where to site a new location, factors such as labor, real estate, demographics, proximity to market, taxation, state & local regulations and many other factors must be considered.
by Scott Nelson | Nov 30, 2017 | accounting, blockchain, compliance, government incentives, innovation, tax, tax incentives, tax technology
In a digital era where software is eating the world, the vast majority of public companies are struggling to stay current when it comes to deploying new technologies in their tax and finance departments. It’s true that one of the primary duties of the chief financial officer is to de-risk the enterprise, but at what cost when they are losing competitive advantage due to slow adoption of new technology?
by Scott Nelson | Jul 6, 2017 | accounting, compliance, FASB Topic 832, regulation
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has been working through a project on materiality for the past year-and-a-half, because up to now, there has been no explicit U.S. GAAP accounting standard for the accounting of government assistance.
Materiality is integral to Topic 832, Accounting Standards Update, Government Assistance in terms of defining a threshold for which government incentives will ultimately have to be disclosed.
by Scott Nelson | Jan 23, 2017 | compliance, regulation
With every new president, there always comes some uncertainty to how the new regime will affect policy. However, with the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump now behind us, there is a heightened level of anticipation for what might happen in the coming months. Even without the wildcard that is President Trump, a Republican controlled House and Senate will ensure that many changes will be coming that will greatly impact compliance in regulated industries in 2017.