• @[email protected]
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    358 months ago

    This is just plain incorrect.

    The law doesn’t allow CEOs to write off yachts.

    Whether or not regulators investigate them is another matter.

    • @dustyData
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      118 months ago

      That’s why they don’t own the yachts, but they own the charter companies that run the yachts.

    • @[email protected]
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      118 months ago

      Can’t they just buy in the name of a company, which would be a ‘business expense’, which is kind of a write off?

      • @HydraulicMonkey
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        118 months ago

        They would have to justify how it is a part of the companies operations. In theory at least.

        So a private jet to fly your execs to business meets? Ok.

        A yacht? Maybe for entertaining customers? I don’t know about the US, but here in Australia entertainment expenses are written off at a lower rate than other business expenses.

        • @TheEighthDoctor
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          48 months ago

          A yacht can have meeting rooms, you can receive clients in these meeting rooms for business purposes, making it therefore a business expense.

        • @[email protected]
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          08 months ago

          here in Australia entertainment expenses are written off at a lower rate than other business expenses.

          Sorry mate. Not really correct.

          If an Australian company pays for entertainment expenses for staff, it’s considered a fringe benefit and fringe benefits tax is payable. It equates to almost the cost of the actual expense. So if a company pays $10k for an employee to take a holiday, they’ll have to pay almost $10k in fringe benefits tax, but they do get a deduction for the whole $20k, which will save them $5k in income tax.

          • @HydraulicMonkey
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            38 months ago

            Yeah, so to simplify, written off at a different rate.

            • @[email protected]
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              08 months ago

              Not really, at all.

              It’s written off at the same rate, while being subject to a whole other type of tax, which means the company pays more tax, rather than less.

              • @HydraulicMonkey
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                38 months ago

                Ok, so the point I was originally trying to make was that claiming a yacht as an entertainment expense was less attractive. Would you agree?

                • @[email protected]
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                  -48 months ago

                  If sticking a fork in your eye is “less attractive” than eating icecream then sure.

                  … but let’s be honest, that’s not what you were trying to say. You were just plain wrong. Get over it. No one cares.

                  • @AngryCommieKender
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                    28 months ago

                    The only one who can’t admit they were wrong here is you.

      • @[email protected]
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        58 months ago

        It doesn’t work like that. Expenses need to be “necessarily incurred in the course of producing income”. Just be cause a company pays for something doesn’t make it tax deductible.

        • @SkyezOpen
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          28 months ago

          I can’t have a yacht business meeting without a yacht now can I?