BUS 213 Intermediate Accounting I Suggested Problems (Kieso et al. Intermediate Accounting IFRS edition) Chapter Exercises/Problems 2 E2-3‚ E2-5‚ E2-6 3 E3-1‚ E3-5‚ E3-10‚ E3-11 4 E4-9‚ P4-4 5 E5-3‚ E5-7‚ E5-10‚ E5-13 18 E18-5‚ E18-10‚ E18-11‚ E18-15‚ E18-16‚ P18-6 7 E7-6‚ E7-12‚ E7-15‚ E7-18‚ E7-21‚ E7-28 8 E8-2‚ E8-9‚ E8-10‚ E8-13‚ E8-17 9 E9-1‚ E9-5‚ E9-7‚ E9-23 10 E10-4‚ E10-8‚ E10-14‚ E10-18‚ E10-25 11 E11-6‚ E11-12‚ E11-18‚ E11-19‚ E11-23‚ E11-26‚ E11-27‚ E11-29 14 E14-6
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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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Solution sto Chapter 2 Problems Accounting Judgements Questions 1. Accounting principles include: (a) Underlying assumptions – basic underlying assumptions that make accounting possible. (b) Qualitative criteria – standards to judge policy choices in conjunction with reporting objectives. (c) Measurement methods – ways to measure results and financial position. 2. The importance of establishing a document such as the IASB’s Framework is that this material helps standard setters when
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CHAPTER 2 EXERCISES & PROBLEMS SOLUTIONS E2.1. Category Financial Statement(s) Cash…………………………………………… A BS Accounts payable…………….……………….. L BS Common stock………………………………… OE BS Depreciation expense………………………….. E IS Net sales……………………………………….. R IS Income tax expense……………………………. E IS Short term investments………………………... A BS Gain on sale of land……………………………. G IS Retained earnings……………………………… OE BS Dividends payable……………………………
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CHAPTER 2 SOLUTIONS TO B EXERCISES EXERCISE 2-1B (15–20 minutes) (a) True. (b) False – General-purpose financial reports helps users who lack the ability to demand all the financial information they need from an entity and therefore must rely‚ at least partly‚ on the information in financial reports. (c) False – Standard-setting that is based on personal conceptual frameworks will lead to different conclusions about identical or similar issues. As a result‚ standards will not be consistent
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years)=Inventory/Flow rate 0.666667 Inventory Turns 1.5 Part B Per-Unit Inventory Cost Percentage 16.66667 Per-Unit Inventory Cost (in $) 166.6667 Applying Little’s Law to Financials allows us to see how efficient organization is. In this particular problem we’re concerned with the process so that the average inflow ( going into the process ) and the average outflow (coming out of the process). How long does it take for a dollar to get through the entire process how many dollars are sitting in inventory
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Chapter 19: Accounting for Income Taxes Fundamentals of Accounting for Income Taxes * Intro * Pretax Financial Income- income before taxes‚ income for financial reporting purposes‚ income for BOOK purposes * Determine according to GAAP * Taxable Income- amount used to compute income taxes payable * Determine using Internal Revenue Code (tax code) * Differences arise for a simple reason‚ for financial reporting purposes companies use the full accrual
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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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MKT 2375 Chapter 2 Problem 1 a. CD Contribution Profit Selling Price to CD Distributor Less: Variable Cost $9.00 $1.25 $0.35 $1.00 $2.60 CD Package and disk Songwriter’s royalties Recording artists’ royalties Total Variable Cost Contribution per CD unit $6.40 Chapter 2 Problem 1 b. Break-Even Analysis – Units and Dollars Total Fixed Cost Advertising and Promotion $275‚000 Studio Recording’s Overhead $250‚000 Total Fixed Cost $525‚000 BEVU = $525‚000 / $6.40 = 82‚031
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Fin 4910/6990 Further Questions Problem 7.19 (a) Company A has been offered the rates shown in Table 7.3. It can borrow for three years at 6.45%. What floating rate can it swap this fixed rate into? (b) Company B has been offered the rates shown in Table 7.3. It can borrow for 5 years at LIBOR plus 75 basis points. What fixed rate can it swap this floating rate into? (a) Company A can pay LIBOR and receive 6.21% for three years. It can therefore exchange a loan at 6.45% into a loan at LIBOR plus
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