Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

what does *net of* mean here

English answer:

less

Added to glossary by Peter Linton (X)
Sep 20, 2003 08:56
20 yrs ago
7 viewers *
English term

what does *net of* mean here

Non-PRO English Bus/Financial
Profit and Loss Account includes Research and Development expenditure (Net of Grant received).

I thank all professionals in advance.
Responses
3 +4 less
4 +1 "having deducted"
5 -1 After taxes, deductions, expenses, etc.

Responses

+4
37 mins
Selected

less

Expenditure on R&D, less (after subtracting) the grant received - so the net figure goes into the P&L.
I agree with David Moore that in this context, "net" has nothing to do with taxes, deductions, expenses etc, although in other contexts that would be right.
Pedantic point: net is sometimes (incorrectly) written "nett".
Peer comment(s):

agree Lydia Molea : that's it
41 mins
agree DGK T-I
2 hrs
agree Daniela McKeeby
3 hrs
agree Catherine Norton
9 hrs
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you very much. It was a brain teaser for me."
-1
4 mins

After taxes, deductions, expenses, etc.

This is my take on it. I believe it means the final amount of the grant--after taxes and any other applicable reductions.

Good luck to you!
terry

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Note added at 2003-09-20 09:03:01 (GMT)
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Sorry!...
I meant to say \"deductions\"---and NOT reductions.


t
Reference:

Exp.

Peer comment(s):

disagree Peter Linton (X) : My take is that it means specifically Net of Grant received, not net of (after) taxes, deductions, expenses, etc. If it said just "net R&D expenditure" you would be right.
36 mins
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+1
22 mins

"having deducted"

....is what it SHOULD mean, but I'm not too sure that they have their terminology right, though; it looks as if they meant "included".
Any grant would appear on their books as a receipt, and the R&D figures on the other side of their books as an expense. But the answer referring to taxes cannot possibly make sense.
Peer comment(s):

agree DGK T-I : agree 'after having deducted the grant received'-I guess R&D expenditure net of grant received(the income or part of it) could make sense in a profit & loss account(the difference might be a meaningful surplus or deficit)
1 hr
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