CHAPTER 2 Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) Topics 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Conceptual framework– general. Objectives of financial reporting. Qualitative characteristics of accounting. Elements of financial statements. Basic assumptions. Basic principles: a. Measurement. b. Revenue recognition. c. Expense recognition. d. Full disclosure. Accounting principles– comprehensive. Constraints. Assumptions‚ principles‚ and constraints. 28‚ 29‚ 30 10 11 Questions
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The Accounting Process (Textbook Libby et al. Chapters 1 and 2). Objectives: When you have successfully completed this lesson‚ you will be able to... Define accounting and explain its purpose Define business and identify the different types of businesses Explain the accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity Visualize the start of a business‚ create accounting transactions for it‚ and prepare simple financial statements Reading Assignment Please read chapters 1 and
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Merchandise: Products that a company acquires to resell to customers. Merchandisers earn net income by buying and selling merchandise. -Wholesalers or retailers Wholesaler: An intermediary that buys products from manufacturers and sells them to retailers or wholesalers. Retailer: An intermediary that buys products from manufacturers or wholesalers and sells them to consumers. Cost of goods sold: The expense of buying and preparing merchandise. Gross profit: Net sales of a product – Cost of goods
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Chapter 8 Segment and Interim Reporting Chapter Outline I. FASB Accounting Standards Codification Topic 280‚ Segment Reporting (FASB ASC 280)‚ provides current guidance on segment reporting. A. ASC 280 follows a management approach in which segments are based on the way that management disaggregates the enterprise for making operating decisions; these are referred to as operating segments. B. Operating segments are components of an enterprise which meet three criteria. 1. Engage in business
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Chapter 24 Key Terms 1. Positivism- a philosophy of human intellectual development that culminated in science. In The Positive Philosophy Comte argued that human thought had developed in three stages: Theological‚ metaphysical‚ and positive. 2. Natural selection- The principal of survival of the fittest. It was naturalistic and mechanistic‚ requiring no guiding mind behind the development in organic nature. Contradicted with Biblical story of creation. 3. Social Darwinism- The application
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CHAPTER 3 The Accounting Information System ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) Topics Questions 1. Transaction identification. 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8 2. Nominal accounts. 4‚ 7 3. Trial balance. 6‚ 10 4. Adjusting entries. 8‚ 11‚ 13‚ 14 5. Financial statements. 6. Closing. 12 7. Inventory and cost of goods sold. 9 8. Comprehensive accounting cycle. *9. Brief Exercises Exercises Problems 1‚ 2 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 17 1 2‚ 3‚ 4 1‚ 2‚ 7‚ 8 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8‚ 9‚ 10‚ 20 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4
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The Need for Payroll and Personnel Records: Case Problem C1. Paychecks Kept Coming Ken‚ a salaried employee‚ was terminated from his company in April of this year. Business had been slow since the beginning of the year‚ and each of the operating plants had laid off workers. Ken’s dismissal was processed through the Human Resources Department‚ but the information was not relayed to the corporate payroll office. As had been the policy‚ checks for workers at remote sites were mailed to the employees
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14 Accounting publications and research in twentieth-century Japan1 14.1 Introduction Japan’s interest in modern accounting began in the late nineteenth century with Alexander Shand [1844–1930].2 The Japanese translation of Shand’s (1873) Bank bookkeeping proved to be so important that his system of bank accounting became legally obligatory for the newly established banking system of the Meiji era. In the same year‚ Fukuzawa (1873–74) published a Japanese translation of Bryant and Stratton’s (1871)
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CHAPTER 2 CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK UNDERLYING FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING IFRS questions are available at the end of this chapter. TRUe-FALSe—Conceptual Answer No. Description F 1. Nature of conceptual framework. T 2. Conceptual framework definition. F 3. Levels of conceptual framework. T 4 International conceptual framework. F 5. Statements of Financial Accounting Concepts. T 6. Decision usefulness.Objective of financial reporting. F 7. Financial statement users. T 8. Relevance and
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CHAPTER 1 MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING‚ TYPES AND ETHICS. 1) Managerial Accounting: Firms internal accounting system and designed to support the information needs of managers in order to make decisions. Not bound by GAAP. a) Managerial accounting has 3 objectives: i) To provide information for planning organization actions ii) To provide information for controlling organization actions. iii) To provide information for making effective decisions. b) Reports that help mangers that are nonfinancial are:
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