Ask Question
22 January, 02:58

Ned, a college professor, owns a separate business (not real estate) in which he participates in the current year. He has one employee who works part-time in the business. a. If Ned participates for 600 hours and the employee participates for 2,000 hours during the year, Ned qualifies as a material participant. b. If Ned participates for 120 hours and the employee participates for 120 hours during the year, Ned does not qualify as a material participant. c. If Ned participates for 95 hours and the employee participates for 5 hours during the year, Ned probably does not qualify as material participant. d. If Ned participates for 500 hours and the employee participates for 520 hours during the year, Ned qualifies as material participant. e. None of these choices applies.

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 22 January, 03:14
    0
    a. If Ned participates for 600 hours and the employee participates for 2,000 hours during the year, Ned qualifies as a material participant.

    Explanation:

    Ned, a college professor, owns a separate business (not real estate) in which he participates in the current year. He has one employee who works part-time in the business. Option A is the correct answer because an individual who participates for more than 500 hours is a material participant regardless of how much others participate, so If Ned participates for 600 hours and the employee participates for 2,000 hours during the year, Ned qualifies as a material participant.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Ned, a college professor, owns a separate business (not real estate) in which he participates in the current year. He has one employee who ...” in 📗 Business if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers