tailieunhanh - One-Parent Family Tax Credit

Basel II will need to be reworked thoroughly, not just tweaked at the margin. Two of the key features of Basel II are that banks can use their own internal models to calculate capital requirements under Pillar 1, and that credit ratings also serve as risk weights in regulatory capital calculations. These internal models typically generate lower capital requirement for (large) US banks. Suffice it to say that all these elements have had their credibility severely damaged by the events of the past eight months. Were UBS and Citigroup using these internal models to guide their asset allocation decisions, including. | IT 9 One-Parent Family Tax Credit ver RPC002031_EN_WB_L_1 What is a One-Parent Family Tax Credit A One-Parent Family Tax Credit is a tax credit that is available to a single parent or a person who has custody of and maintains a child who is living with him or her. This can include someone who is single widowed a surviving civil partner deserted separated from spouse or civil partner divorced or whose civil partnership has been dissolved. How can I claim entitlement to the One-Parent Family Tax Credit A One-Parent Family Tax Credit is a credit that can be claimed if a child resides with you for the whole or part of the tax year and you are not jointly assessed to tax as a married person or a civil partner you are not living with your spouse or civil partner you are not cohabiting you have not been widowed or become a surviving civil partner in the year for which you are making the claim and are not in receipt of the basic personal tax credit to which you are entitled as a result of your bereavement for that year. With regard to whom can I claim the One-Parent Family Tax Credit A claimant with a qualifying child can claim this credit. A qualifying child means a child born during the tax year or who is under 18 years of age at the beginning of the tax year who if over 18 years of age is receiving full-time education or undergoing a fulltime training course for a trade or profession for a minimum of two years or is permanently incapacitated either physically or mentally from maintaining himself or herself and has become so before reaching 21 years of age or has become permanently incapacitated after reaching the age of 21 years but while in receipt of full-time 2 education or undergoing a full-time training course for a trade or profession and a child of whom you are the parent including a step-parent or an adoptive parent or if not a parent of whom you have custody and who you maintain at your own expense for the whole or part of a tax year. What relief am I due