Exercises and Problems XACC/291 Principles of Accounting II Week 2 February 8‚ 2015 Exercise E9-1 The following expenditures relating to plant assets were made by Spaulding Company during the first 2 months of 2011 (determine cost of the plant acquisitions). 1. Paid $5‚000 of accrued taxes at time plant site was acquired. 2. Paid $200 insurance to cover possible accident loss on new factory machinery while the machinery was in transit. 3. Paid $850 sales taxes on new delivery
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mid-sized accounting firm in Boston that specializes in commercial accounting and audits. My particular specialty in accounting practices for shipping companies‚ ranging from small fishing fleets to a couple of the big firms with ships along the East Coast. About 18 months ago McKay‚ Sanderson‚ and Smith Associates became part of a large merger involving two other accounting firms. These firms have offices in Miami‚ Seattle‚ Baton Rouge‚ and Los Angeles. Although the other two accounting firms were
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Textbook case: Managerial Accounting for Managers‚ 2nd edition Noreen‚ Brewer and Garrison (McGraw-Hill/Irwin‚ 2008). Case 4-33 Cost Structure; Target profit and Break-Even Analysis Contribution Income Statement for all three scenarios: 15% commission 20% commission Own sales force Sales $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 $16‚000‚000 Variable manuf. cost $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 $7‚200‚000 Commissions $2‚400‚000 $3‚200‚000 $1‚200‚000 -Tot. variable cost ($9‚600‚000)
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Accounting 3 & 4 Exercises Set # 1 Lee E. 1. Fred has owned and operated a sole proprietorship for several years. On January 1‚ he decides to terminate this business and become a partner in the firm Sears and Roebucks. Fred’s investment in the partnership consists of P12‚000 in cash‚ and the following assets of the proprietorship: accounts receivable P14‚000 less allowance for doubtful accounts of P2‚000‚ and equipment P20‚000 less accumulated depreciation of P4‚000. It is agreed that the allowance
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is provided for general guidance only and on the understanding that it does not represent‚ and is not intended to be‚ advice. Whilst care has been taken in its preparation‚ it should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional accounting‚ tax‚ legal or other advisors. Before making any decision or taking any action‚ you should consult with an appropriate specialist or professional. No warranty is given to the correctness of the information contained in this document‚ or its suitability
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Chapter 8 Activity-Based Costing: A Tool to Aid Decision Making Solutions to Questions 8-1 Activity-based costing differs from traditional costing systems in a number of ways. In activity-based costing‚ nonmanufacturing as well as manufacturing costs may be assigned to products. And‚ some manufacturing costs—including the costs of idle capacity—may be excluded from product costs. An activity-based costing system typically includes a number of activity cost pools‚ each of which has its
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Chapter 11 THE STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS Problems Problem 11-1 |2003 sales |$8‚743‚000 | |Less: Change in accounts receivable | (70‚000) | |Cash generated from sales during 2003 |$8‚673‚000 | Problem 11-2 a. Issuance of a 12-month note in return for $2 million cash is a financing source of cash. Use
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CAUTION: See "round" rules in Excel Instructions before calculating OT for salaried employees. Enter the appropriate numbers/formulas in the shaded (gray) cells. An asterisk (*) will appear to the right of an incorrect answer. Continuing Payroll Problem-A KIPLEY COMPANY‚ INC. PAYROLL REGISTER FOR PERIOD ENDING January 8‚ 20 - NO. OF W/H ALLOW. REGULAR EARNINGS HOURS WORKED HOURS WORKED OVERTIME EARNINGS TOTAL AMOUNT EARNINGS OASDI FICA HI FIT SIT DEDUCTIONS GROUP SUTA CIT SIMPLE
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Chapter 4 Case 2: Greetings Inc.: Activity-Based Costing Solution: 1. An activity-based costing system may be appropriate for Wall Décor‚ when overhead allocation based job-order costing provides product cost distortion. As seen on previous case‚ this distortion happens when one product is manufacturing in high volume and the others are manufacturing in complexity as well as in low volume. In this situation Wall Décor should change its costing system for selling its high volume produced
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• Case 1-4 Generally Accepted Accounting Principles At the completion of the Darby Department Store audit‚ the president asks about the meaning of the phrase “in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles‚” which appears in your audit report on the management’s financial statements. He observes that the meaning of the phrase must include more than what he thinks of as “principles.” Required: a. Explain the meaning of the term accounting principles as used in the audit report
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