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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Every business executive and owner does estate planning, which simply entails optimizing the after-tax earnings accumulation and transfer of wealth. Recognizing estate planning issues and opportunities is central. A grasp of income, estate and gift tax is valuable for all.
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2.00 Credits
The increasing influence of China on the global economy is one of the most significant events of the 21st century. As future business leaders, the MSA students have a unique opportunity to join Professor Chao-Shin Liu and MSA Program Director, Linda Espahbodi, on an engaging academic and cultural immersion in China. This nine day journey to Beijing and Hong Kong encompasses interactive visits with China's top accounting and investment firms. Academic and business leaders will share their direct experience and insights on China's movement to global economic leadership.
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1.00 Credits
This course provides students with the opportunity to apply accounting concepts to actual business settings in the MS Accountancy Program for Ernst & Young. During the nine months between the two academic summer sessions, students are employed and assigned to clients by Ernst & Young primarily in the Assurance and Advisory Business Services area. Assignment to the clients throughout the United States and Canada is managed and supervised by each student's local Ernst & Young office. Students obtain a variety of experiences to help reinforce the concepts learned in the academic curriculum.
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1.00 Credits
This course is a continuation of ACCT 554Y, Accountancy Curricular Practical Training Part One. This course provides students with the opportunity to apply accounting concepts to actual business settings in the MS in Accountancy Program for Ernst & Young. During the nine months between the two academic summer sessions, students are employed and asssigned to clients by Ernst & young primarily in the Assurance and Advisory Business Services area. Assignment to the clients throughout the United States and Canada is managed and supervised by each student's local Ernst & Young office. Students obtain a variety of experiences to help reinforce the concepts learned in the academic curriculum.
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1.00 Credits
Dir Rdgs: Current Issues Acct
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
This course is designed to provide students with an in-depth understanding of transfer pricing, an introduction to Advanced Pricing Agreements, and an opportunity to explore federal and foreign income tax implications of transfer pricing. At the conclusion of the course, the students will develop an article that will be submitted for possible publication in Strategic Finance or a similar journal.
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2.00 Credits
A two credit course that will focus on a particular tax topic. Student will be required to write a 40 page paper providing an overview of the tax topic chosen along with tax planning strategies to consider and pittfalls to avoid. Student will be required to cite appropriate tax authority throughout the paper such as the IRC, tax regulations, revenue rulings, court cases, etc.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
This coure is designed to have students obtain an in-depth understanding of how the subareas in accounting are integrated on the professional licensing examination. Enrollees will be given the opportunity to explore how rules, regulations, procedures, and controls introduced in financial, audit, tax, managerial, and business law courses combine to establish the minimum requirements for entry into the accounting profession.
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3.00 Credits
This directed readings course is intended as an extension of ACCT 70310 focusing like ACCT 70310 on the use of accounting information for equity valuation and techniques of fundamental analysis. The readings include a detailed examination of alternative methods of equity valuation at an advanced theoretical and practical level. While accounting-based approaches to valuation using the residual operating income valuation model are considered, the readings focus on the theoretical and practical advantages and disadvantages of alternatives to the residual income approach such as discounted free cash flows and abnormal earnings growth models. The readings include a rigorous comparison of discounted free cash flow and accounting-based approaches to fundamental valuation, how the accounting-based approaches lend themselves to an analysis of determinants of firms' price-to-earnings and market-to-book ratios, and current approaches to dealing with accounting issues in these models vis-a-vis the accounting issues one encounters in discounted cash flow models. In addition, approximately one credit hour of this course will be devoted to reading and problem material on fair value accounting, including coverage of SFAS 157 and SFAS 159.
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3.00 Credits
Governmental entitites, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and not-for-profit (NFP) organizations encounter many special challenges. This course will focus on the unique accounting and reporting aspects faced by these organizations and enable participants to: understand the role budgets play in governmental entities, NGOs and NFP organizations; prepare and implement flexible budgets; create a cash budget and understand its managerial use; explain the components and meaning of a balance sheet, activity statement, cash flow statement and statement of functional expenses; work with basic terminology and techniques of fund accounting; identify and report the federal income tax consequences of specific NFP activities.
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