Accounting
Latest News
An Increase in Customer Theft is Increasing Restaurant Prices
IRS Shares Five New Warning Signs of Incorrect ERC Claims
‘Unpredictable’ Election Clouds Tax and Economic Policy View
Sanders May Bring His Populist Brand to Powerful Senate Finance Committee
State & local governments losing out on $1.5B per a year in uncollected sales taxes
A national report released on Friday suggests that local governments across the country are losing out on more than $1.5 billion a year in revenue due to uncollected sales tax on Internet purchases.
Payroll service provider gets 6.5 year prison sentence, $26.7M restitution to IRS
A federal judge on Friday sentenced Robert R. Sacco, the owner of a Dayton, Ohio-based payroll company, to 6 1/2 years in prison and ordered him to pay $26.7 million to the Internal Revenue Service.
California unemployment rate falls to 8.6%
California's unemployment rate fell below 9 percent for the first time in nearly five years last month, signaling the economic recovery is finally gaining traction.
New scoring system boosts success of JobsOhio program
Nearly one-quarter of the 76,000 job commitments JobsOhio says it helped secure for Ohio in 2012 would not have counted under the scoring system the non-profit used the previous year, a Dayton Daily News analysis has found.
Best jobs for 2013? Demand for accountants higher than ever
College students and those considering reshaping their professional paths frequently look for lists of what the best career choices are. Well, this isn't a list, but a hard fact: Accounting graduates are among the most in-demand professionals in America today.
Embezzlement charges face employee who was “like family”
Now, fellow employees at an Ashland marketing firm, who cooked meals for Mayhew and wished her well, are hoping she's jail-bound.
HispanicBusiness releases top 500 rankings; Florida businesses take spotlight
Miami's BrightStar Corp. tops HispanicBusiness.com's annual rankings for the third straight year
23% of Americans worked from home at least partially in 2012
With rising gas prices and long commutes, more and more American workers are finding a way to beat the hassle of the daily trek to work: working from a home office.