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Rapper 50 Cent is not great at counting his nickels and dimes — and his accountant isn’t a whole lot better.

After the Grammy winner said in court Wednesday that he didn’t know the value of his major branding deals with corporations like Reebok, he put his CPA on the witness stand.

The bean counter, Mai Pho, was testifying in the punitive phase of a lawsuit brought by the baby mama of the rapper’s rival Rick Ross. The woman, Lastonia Leviston, already won a $5 million verdict against the rapper, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, after jurors found he violated her privacy by posting her private sex-tape video online.

Pho provided information about Jackson’s net worth so jurors in Manhattan Supreme Court could determine how much to charge as punishment for posting the film.

But the California accountant — who has never actually met her famous client — was accused of leaving major assets off Jackson’s balance sheet, including $29 million he lent to companies he controls.

“Was the $29 million on your list?” Leviston’s lawyer, Philip Freidin, asked Pho, noting that he found the figure on the rapper’s subpoenaed tax returns.

“No,” she admitted, referencing a list of assets and liabilities she wrote that puts Jackson’s net worth at $4.4 million.

Forbes magazine says it’s closer to $155 million. The rapper filed for bankruptcy days after the jury issued the initial $5 million verdict.

When Jackson’s lawyer, James Renard, questioned Pho about the discrepancy she said, “It’s not like the companies have that money to pay it back.”

Pho, whose firm GSO Business Management, has been billing Jackson $30,000 a month for the past two years, also couldn’t recall basic details about the rapper’s recurring expenses.

“Does Mr. Jackson have drivers?” Freidin asked.

“Yes,” Pho answered.

“How many?” he said.

“I don’t know,” she said.

The University of California grad valued new partnerships between Jackson’s headphone company, SMS Audio, with Disney, Marvel, Lucasfilm, Intel and Reebok at zero because they could “go nowhere and make no money,” she said.