Garrison 14e Practice Exam – Chapter 1 Print these pages. Answer each of the following questions‚ explaining your answers or showing your work‚ and then compare your solutions to those provided at the end of the practice exam. 1. Match each of the following terms with its definition. Business process Constraint Enterprise risk management Lean production Value chain a. __ Business process _ A series of steps that are followed in order to carry out some task in a business. b.
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Solutions for Review Problems of Chapter 14 1. a. Given the following diagram for a product‚ determine the quantity of each component required to assemble one unit of the finished product. b. Draw a tree diagram for the stapler: a. F: 2 J: 2 x 2 = 4 D: 2 x 4 = 8 G: 1 L: 1 x 2 = 2 J: 1 x 2 = 2 H: 1 A: 1 x 4 = 4 D: 1 x 2 = 2 Totals: F = 2; G = 1; H = 1; J = 6; D = 10; L = 2; A = 4 b. Stapler Top Assembly Base Assembly Cover Spring Slide Assembly Base Strike Pad Rubber Pad 2 Slide
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EXERCISE 14-1 (15-20 minutes) Valuation account relating to the long-term liability‚ bonds payable (sometimes referred to as an adjunct account). The 3‚000 would continue to be reported as long-term. Current liability if current assets are used to satisfy the debt. Current liability‚ 200‚000 long-term liability‚ 800‚000. Current liability. Probably noncurrent‚ although if operating cycle is greater than one year and current assets are used‚ this item would be classified as current. Current liability
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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 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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Long-Term Construction Contracts 163 CHAPTER 10 MULTIPLE CHOICE ANSWERS AND SOLUTIONS 10-1: a Percentage of Completion Method: Contract Price P1‚000‚000 Less: Total estimated cost Cost incurred P 200‚000 Estimated remaining cost _400‚000 __600‚000 Gross profit estimated 400‚000 % of completion (200‚000/600‚000) __33 1/3% Gross profit to be recognized P 133‚333 Zero Profit Method: 0 10-2: a P100‚000 2007 2008 Contract Price P9
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CHAPTER 3 CONSOLIDATIONS—SUBSEQUENT TO THE DATE OF ACQUISITION Answers to Discussion Questions How Does a Company Really Decide which Investment Method to Apply? Students can come up with literally dozens of factors that should be considered by Pilgrim in making the decision as to the method of accounting for its subsidiary‚ Crestwood Corporation. The following is simply a partial list of possible points to consider. Use of the information. If Pilgrim does not monitor its own income levels
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CHAPTER 1 Partnership Formation and Operations EXERCISES Exercise 1 –1 |1.a |Campos‚ Capital |14‚000 | | | | Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts | |14‚000 | | | | | | |
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ACCOUNTING THEORIES 1. What is the difference between a positive theory of accounting and a normative theory of accounting? 2. What do we mean when we say that ‘theories are abstractions of reality’? Do you agree that theories of accounting are necessarily abstractions of reality? 3. Identify and explain 5 different criteria we might use to establish a theory as being suitable for use in our research. 4. Is the study of financial accounting theory a waste of time for accounting
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Chapter 1 BUSINESS COMBINATIONS Answers to Questions 1 A business combination is a union of business entities in which two or more previously separate and independent companies are brought under the control of a single management team. Three situations establish the control necessary for a business combination‚ namely‚ when one or more corporations become subsidiaries‚ when one company transfers its net assets to another‚ and when each combining company transfers its net assets to a newly
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