Can you show your calculations in detail? I'm immediately suspicious because the power you found for the resistor turned out to be complex; Resistors have no reactance and can only dissipate real power no matter if the current is complex or not. Inductors and capacitors have no resistance and cannot dissipate real power, yet your results show them both dissipating some real power.
For display of complex power in general I'm partial to the rectangular form so that I can immediately see the real and reactive parts. But some prefer to see the magnitude of the apparent power and the power factor. When in doubt provide both.
You need to specify how you will interpret a voltage before you even calculate it. That is, establish a reference point or orientation on your circuit diagram for interpretation of the voltage. Otherwise you can only talk about the magnitude of the potential change. When we write KVL equations, for example, we agree on interpreting the potential change in light of the arbitrarily decided current direction and direction of our "KVL walk" around the loop.
In the figure below, the voltage ##V_R## across the resistor would be positive in one interpretation and negative in the other. Yet it's the same potential drop. It's all in how you define the "measurement" on the circuit diagram.
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