TEST BANK FOR MCGRAW-HILL'S TAXATION OF
INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS ENTITIES 14TH EDITION BY
SPILKER FULL TESTBANK|| LATEST AND
COMPLETE UPDATE 2025 WITH VERIFIED SOLUTIONS||
GUARANTEED A+
,1 | Page
TEST BANK FOR MCGRAW-HILL'S TAXATION OF INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS
ENTITIES 14TH EDITION BY SPILKER FULL TESTBANK|| LATEST AND COMPLETE
UPDATE 2025 WITH VERIFIED SOLUTIONS|| GUARANTEED A+
,2 | Page
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Tax
INSTRUCTOR’S MANUAL
Learning Objectives
1-1. Demonstrate how taxes influence basic business, investment, personal, and political decisions. 1-2. Discuss what constitut
a tax and the general objectives of taxation.
1-3. Describe the different tax rate structures and calculate a tax. 1-4. Identify the various federal, state, and local taxes.
1-5. Apply appropriate criteria to evaluate alternate tax systems.
Teaching Suggestions
This chapter provides an overview of why taxes are important, what a tax is, how to calculate a tax, various tax rates and tax ra
structures, different types of federal, state, and local taxes, and how to evaluate a tax system. One intent of the chapter is to g
students thinking about the pervasive influence of taxes and thus why it is important for a business or accounting student
understand taxes. Discussing how taxes affect decisions that they will face (buying a house, investing for retirement, etc.) is
effective way to pique students’ interest.
This chapter also provides an opportunity to motivate students by discussing the political importance of taxes and the debate ov
alternative tax systems. Throughout most of the chapter, you can tie the material discussed back to the debate over alternative t
systems. This is easily done in the section on evaluating alternative tax systems and alternative tax rate structures but may also
be done for other parts of the text. For example, when discussing how to calculate a tax, you can point out that once the tax bas
is computed, it is very easy to calculate virtually any tax. The difficulty is in determining the tax base. The implication of this
understanding is that the tax rate structure (e.g., progressive versus proportional) has little effect on tax complexity.
In teaching this chapter, the time that you spend in class will vary based on how much discussion that you want to incorporate
regarding evaluating tax systems and implicit taxes. Most of the concepts in this chapter are relatively straightforward, and thu
the chapter provides students with an introduction to tax without overwhelming them on the first day or so of class. This is
particularly important if your students have some trepidation regarding their first tax course.
Implicit tax is typically a difficult concept for students to understand. The text provides a good overview of implicit tax. If you
plan to cover implicit tax in some detail, you might alert students that this is a difficult concept and that they should be careful
get familiar with this discussion in the text prior to class.
Assignment Matrix
, 3 | Page
Learning Objectives Text Features
Difficulty
DQ1-1 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-2 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-3 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-4 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-5 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-6 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-7 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-8 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-9 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-10 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-11 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-12 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-13 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-14 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-15 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-16 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-17 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-18 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-19 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-20 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-21 10 min. Easy X
DQ1-22 10 min. Easy X
DQ1-23 15 min. Medium X
INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS ENTITIES 14TH EDITION BY
SPILKER FULL TESTBANK|| LATEST AND
COMPLETE UPDATE 2025 WITH VERIFIED SOLUTIONS||
GUARANTEED A+
,1 | Page
TEST BANK FOR MCGRAW-HILL'S TAXATION OF INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS
ENTITIES 14TH EDITION BY SPILKER FULL TESTBANK|| LATEST AND COMPLETE
UPDATE 2025 WITH VERIFIED SOLUTIONS|| GUARANTEED A+
,2 | Page
Chapter 1: An Introduction to Tax
INSTRUCTOR’S MANUAL
Learning Objectives
1-1. Demonstrate how taxes influence basic business, investment, personal, and political decisions. 1-2. Discuss what constitut
a tax and the general objectives of taxation.
1-3. Describe the different tax rate structures and calculate a tax. 1-4. Identify the various federal, state, and local taxes.
1-5. Apply appropriate criteria to evaluate alternate tax systems.
Teaching Suggestions
This chapter provides an overview of why taxes are important, what a tax is, how to calculate a tax, various tax rates and tax ra
structures, different types of federal, state, and local taxes, and how to evaluate a tax system. One intent of the chapter is to g
students thinking about the pervasive influence of taxes and thus why it is important for a business or accounting student
understand taxes. Discussing how taxes affect decisions that they will face (buying a house, investing for retirement, etc.) is
effective way to pique students’ interest.
This chapter also provides an opportunity to motivate students by discussing the political importance of taxes and the debate ov
alternative tax systems. Throughout most of the chapter, you can tie the material discussed back to the debate over alternative t
systems. This is easily done in the section on evaluating alternative tax systems and alternative tax rate structures but may also
be done for other parts of the text. For example, when discussing how to calculate a tax, you can point out that once the tax bas
is computed, it is very easy to calculate virtually any tax. The difficulty is in determining the tax base. The implication of this
understanding is that the tax rate structure (e.g., progressive versus proportional) has little effect on tax complexity.
In teaching this chapter, the time that you spend in class will vary based on how much discussion that you want to incorporate
regarding evaluating tax systems and implicit taxes. Most of the concepts in this chapter are relatively straightforward, and thu
the chapter provides students with an introduction to tax without overwhelming them on the first day or so of class. This is
particularly important if your students have some trepidation regarding their first tax course.
Implicit tax is typically a difficult concept for students to understand. The text provides a good overview of implicit tax. If you
plan to cover implicit tax in some detail, you might alert students that this is a difficult concept and that they should be careful
get familiar with this discussion in the text prior to class.
Assignment Matrix
, 3 | Page
Learning Objectives Text Features
Difficulty
DQ1-1 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-2 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-3 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-4 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-5 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-6 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-7 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-8 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-9 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-10 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-11 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-12 5 min. Medium X
DQ1-13 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-14 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-15 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-16 15 min. Medium X
DQ1-17 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-18 5 min. Easy X
DQ1-19 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-20 10 min. Medium X
DQ1-21 10 min. Easy X
DQ1-22 10 min. Easy X
DQ1-23 15 min. Medium X