如何缴纳ACCA年费,不会交的看这里!

发布时间:2020-04-28


ACCA是很多经济学、金融学在校生准备考取的一种含金量很高的证书,也是在金融、财会领域工作的在职人员升职加薪的最大助力。

报考ACCA后,你有没有收到过ACCA官方发来的年费缴纳邮件?你是不是纳闷为什么我5月份交过一次,为何年底又让我交年费?

我可以很确定的告诉你,ACCA的年费确实是每年一次,要注意的是,在510日(因中英时差问题,可能会到512日)之前注册报考ACCA的话,需要缴纳的是本年的年费,在年底或下一年初,你依然需要缴纳会员年费,而这一年费则是你下一自然年的年费,现在大家都知道了吧。

很多人在收到ACCA年费缴纳的邮件之后,又不知道怎么操作,现在教大家如何缴纳年费。

1、进入ACCA官网,在My ACCA里登陆个人账户,在左边找到FeesPayment and Receipts.点击进入。

2、在Transaction Summary中找到openannual subscription fee(年费)。特别注意的是,ACCAer要确认一下自己有没有除了年费以外其他的未交的费用(注册费或者考试费),如果没缴纳,也会显示为open的状态。

3、页面跳转至支付的页面,核对一下项目和金额。

4、进行支付选择支付方式的时候,可以选择支付宝或者银联卡。支付宝相对方便,如果出现交易不成功的情况,费用也会在48小时内退回账户中,ACCAer要留意一下。

5、交易成功后会跳转一个交易成功的页面。

6、同时也有会英国的邮件会通知你支付成功,所以要随时留意邮件信息。

7、缴费之后还是不放心的话,也可以返回到Transaction Summary里看一下所有transaction是不是已经是close的状态,Account Balance0。如果显示还是95的话,刷新一下,刷新不出来就等两天后再来查看一下。

少数同学在收到缴费邮件之后,忘记缴纳费用,那ACCA年费逾期未缴会有什么影响呢?

不管由于何种原因,ACCA年费没有在规定时间内缴纳, ACCA的头衔会被暂时取消。(不想继续考ACCA的话也可以不交年费)

如果真的只是忘记交了呢,又应该如何处理?

这是需要发邮件给ACCA官方,让官方帮你重新激活ACCA头衔,同时要承担未缴的年费和一定数额的罚金,所以建议大家按时缴纳年费。

最后,建议大家在5月和12月留意ACCA官方邮件,及时缴纳年费,避免带来其他的不良影响,影响正常的工作。更多资讯请关注51题库考试学习网。


下面小编为大家准备了 ACCA考试 的相关考题,供大家学习参考。

(ii) Identify the points that must be confirmed and any action necessary in order for capital treatment to

apply to the transaction. (4 marks)

正确答案:
(ii) Ensuring capital treatment
For the capital treatment to apply, a number of conditions need to be satisfied such that the following points need to be
confirmed.
– The business of Acrux Ltd consists wholly or mainly of the carrying on of a trade as opposed to the making of
investments.
– Spica is UK resident and ordinarily resident despite living in both the UK and Solaris.
– The transaction is being carried out for the purpose of the company’s trade and is not part of a scheme intended
to avoid tax. This is likely to be the case as HMRC accept that a management disagreement over the running of
the company has an adverse effect on the running of the business.
In addition, Spica must have owned the shares for at least five years so the transaction must not take place until
1 October 2008.

Hindberg is a car retailer. On 1 April 2014, Hindberg sold a car to Latterly on the following terms:

The selling price of the car was $25,300. Latterly paid $12,650 (half of the cost) on 1 April 2014 and would pay the remaining $12,650 on 31 March 2016 (two years after the sale). Hindberg’s cost of capital is 10% per annum.

What is the total amount which Hindberg should credit to profit or loss in respect of this transaction in the year ended 31 March 2015?

A.$23,105

B.$23,000

C.$20,909

D.$24,150

正确答案:D

At 31 March 2015, the deferred consideration of $12,650 would need to be discounted by 10% for one year to $11,500 (effectively deferring a finance cost of $1,150). The total amount credited to profit or loss would be $24,150 (12,650 + 11,500).


In relation to the courts’ powers to interpret legislation, explain and differentiate between:

(a) the literal approach, including the golden rule; and (5 marks)

(b) the purposive approach, including the mischief rule. (5 marks)

正确答案:

Tutorial note:
In order to apply any piece of legislation, judges have to determine its meaning. In other words they are required to interpret the
statute before them in order to give it meaning. The diffi culty, however, is that the words in statutes do not speak for themselves and
interpretation is an active process, and at least potentially a subjective one depending on the situation of the person who is doing
the interpreting.
Judges have considerable power in deciding the actual meaning of statutes, especially when they are able to deploy a number of
competing, not to say contradictory, mechanisms for deciding the meaning of the statute before them. There are, essentially, two
contrasting views as to how judges should go about determining the meaning of a statute – the restrictive, literal approach and the
more permissive, purposive approach.
(a) The literal approach
The literal approach is dominant in the English legal system, although it is not without critics, and devices do exist for
circumventing it when it is seen as too restrictive. This view of judicial interpretation holds that the judge should look primarily
to the words of the legislation in order to construe its meaning and, except in the very limited circumstances considered below,
should not look outside of, or behind, the legislation in an attempt to fi nd its meaning.
Within the context of the literal approach there are two distinct rules:
(i) The literal rule
Under this rule, the judge is required to consider what the legislation actually says rather than considering what it might
mean. In order to achieve this end, the judge should give words in legislation their literal meaning, that is, their plain,
ordinary, everyday meaning, even if the effect of this is to produce what might be considered an otherwise unjust or
undesirable outcome (Fisher v Bell (1961)) in which the court chose to follow the contract law literal interpretation of
the meaning of offer in the Act in question and declined to consider the usual non-legal literal interpretation of the word
(offer).

(ii) The golden rule
This rule is applied in circumstances where the application of the literal rule is likely to result in what appears to the court
to be an obviously absurd result. It should be emphasised, however, that the court is not at liberty to ignore, or replace,
legislative provisions simply on the basis that it considers them absurd; it must fi nd genuine diffi culties before it declines
to use the literal rule in favour of the golden one. As examples, there may be two apparently contradictory meanings to a
particular word used in the statute, or the provision may simply be ambiguous in its effect. In such situations, the golden
rule operates to ensure that preference is given to the meaning that does not result in the provision being an absurdity.
Thus in Adler v George (1964) the defendant was found guilty, under the Offi cial Secrets Act 1920, with obstruction
‘in the vicinity’ of a prohibited area, although she had actually carried out the obstruction ‘inside’ the area.
(b) The purposive approach
The purposive approach rejects the limitation of the judges’ search for meaning to a literal construction of the words of
legislation itself. It suggests that the interpretative role of the judge should include, where necessary, the power to look beyond
the words of statute in pursuit of the reason for its enactment, and that meaning should be construed in the light of that purpose
and so as to give it effect. This purposive approach is typical of civil law systems. In these jurisdictions, legislation tends to set
out general principles and leaves the fi ne details to be fi lled in later by the judges who are expected to make decisions in the
furtherance of those general principles.
European Community (EC) legislation tends to be drafted in the continental manner. Its detailed effect, therefore, can only be
determined on the basis of a purposive approach to its interpretation. This requirement, however, runs counter to the literal
approach that is the dominant approach in the English system. The need to interpret such legislation, however, has forced
a change in that approach in relation to Community legislation and even with respect to domestic legislation designed to
implement Community legislation. Thus, in Pickstone v Freemans plc (1988), the House of Lords held that it was permissible,
and indeed necessary, for the court to read words into inadequate domestic legislation in order to give effect to Community
law in relation to provisions relating to equal pay for work of equal value. (For a similar approach, see also the House of Lords’
decision in Litster v Forth Dry Dock (1989) and the decision in Three Rivers DC v Bank of England (No 2) (1996).) However,
it has to recognise that the purposive rule is not particularly modern and has its precursor in a long established rule of statutory
interpretation, namely the mischief rule.

The mischief rule
This rule permits the court to go behind the actual wording of a statute in order to consider the problem that the statute is
supposed to remedy.
In its traditional expression it is limited by being restricted to using previous common law rules in order to decide the operation
of contemporary legislation. Thus in Heydon’s case (1584) it was stated that in making use of the mischief rule the court
should consider what the mischief in the law was which the common law did not adequately deal with and which statute law
had intervened to remedy. Use of the mischief rule may be seen in Corkery v Carpenter (1950), in which a man was found
guilty of being drunk in charge of a carriage although he was in fact only in charge of a bicycle.


(c) (i) Compute Gloria’s capital gains tax liability for 2006/07 ignoring any claims or elections available to

reduce the liability. (3 marks)

正确答案:

 


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