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August 24, 2010
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North Carolina Asset Protection News

 

Increasingly Integrated Financial Management Systems Are Expected To Support Program Managers Financial Managers, And Budget Analysts At The Same Time

OMB Circular A-127, Financial Management Systems, initially issued in 1984, was revised in 1993.  This Circular sets forth general policies for Federal financial management systems and relates these policies to those in OMB Circular A-130, Management of Federal Information Resources, and OMB Circular A-123, Management Accountability and Control.

The Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 required Agencies to manage by results.  In the spring of 1994, the Chief Financial Officers Council (CFO Council) adopted the following vision for financial management:

Enabling government to work better and cost less requires program and financial managers, working in partnership using modern management techniques and integrated financial management systems, to ensure the integrity of information, make decisions, and measure performance to achieve desirable outcomes and real cost effectiveness.

The Federal Financial Management Improvement Act of 1996 required each agency to implement and maintain financial management systems that comply substantially with Federal financial management systems requirements, applicable Federal accounting standards, and the United States Government Standard General Ledger at the transaction level.

Increasingly, integrated financial management systems are expected to support program managers, financial managers, and budget analysts at the same time.  Information supplied by these systems is expected to become more timely, accurate, and consistent across government.  Systems and data are being shared more and more by agencies with common needs.

 

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Did You Know?    
 
 
LLC envelope offers substantial advantages over other entities
LLC envelope offers substantial advantages over other entities, there are at least five common circumstances when a tax regime other than an S corporation may be more appropriate: 1) the business cannot qualify as an S corporation; 2) the one-class-of-stock limitation for S corporations cannot accommodate certain business terms agreed to by the parties; 3) the business involves appreciating assets (i.e., assets that have, or are likely to have, a fair market value in excess of basis), such as real estate; 4) the business has considerable debt and the owners anticipate significant losses; and 5) the wage-reduction tax strategy explained previously will not benefit the owners because either the primary income of the business is excluded from self-employment tax or, in the case of newly formed companies, one or more employee-owners already receive aggregate wages or self-employment income from an existing business in an amount which approaches the taxable wage base limitation

 


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News about Asset Protection cases in North Carolina and nationwide:

SuperCom Announces New Technology for Active Tracking Solutions and Extends Homeland Security Offerings With
 February 14, 2006

SuperCom Announces New Technology for Active Tracking Solutions and Extends Homeland Security Off...
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EPA Awards Over $10.3 million in Grants to Pacific Southwest Groups
EPA Awards Over $10.3 million in Grants to Pacific Southwest Groups(5/12/06) SAN FRANCISCO-- Today the U.S. Environmenta...
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Integrated Financial Management Systems
Financial management systems must be designed with effective and efficient interrelationships between software, hardware, personnel, procedures, co...
Read more >


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Asset Protection.com Terms

 


Today's Terms

Bonds

Definition:
Essentially loans or debt. When someone lends you money, he or she gets an IOU that promises the loan will be repaid with interest. When you buy a bond, you're basically buying that IOU. A bond certificate is like an IOU: it shows the amount loaned (principal), the rate of interest to be paid on the loan and the date that the principal will be paid back (maturity date). Bonds can be issued by government agencies, such as the U.S. Treasury and by corporations to raise money.

Totten trust

Definition:
A savings account that allows the depositor to open the account as trustee for someone else (no real trust is set up). Account owners may use the funds as they see fit during their lifetime, and then upon their death the account balance is paid to the named beneficiary.

Spendthrift Trusts

Definition:
A spendthrift trust is created specifically to provide asset protection for the beneficiary. These trusts are written so that the beneficiary can receive the benefit of the trust, but have no right to demand benefits from the trust.

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Asset Protection Resources

 


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Asset Protection Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Asset Protection:

  • Trusts
  • Wills
  • Uniform Probate Code
  • Gift Tax
  • Dynasty Trust
  • Annuities

More Asset Protection Law Topics >

North Carolina Asset-Protection Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Asset-Protection attorney you should contact our Asset-Protection Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Apex
  • Asheboro
  • Asheville
  • Burlington
  • Cary
  • Chapel Hill
  • Charlotte
  • Clayton
  • Concord
  • Durham
  • Elizabeth City
  • Fayetteville
  • Fort Bragg
  • Garner
  • Gastonia
  • Goldsboro
  • Greensboro
  • Greenville
  • Henderson
  • Hickory
  • High Point
  • Jacksonville
  • Kernersville
  • Lenoir
  • Lexington
  • Lincolnton
  • Lumberton
  • Matthews
  • Monroe
  • Morganton
  • Mount Airy
  • Raeford
  • Raleigh
  • Reidsville
  • Sanford
  • Statesville
  • Thomasville
  • Wake Forest
  • Wilmington
  • Wilson
  • Winston Salem


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