Chapter 9 Profit Planning and Activity-Based Budgeting McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies‚ Inc. All rights reserved. Learning Objective 1 9-2 Learning objective 1 • List and explain five purposes of budgeting systems. Purposes of Budgeting Systems Budget Budget a detailed plan‚ expressed in quantitative terms‚ that specifies how resources will be acquired and used during a specified period of time. 1. Planning 2. Facilitating Communication and Coordination 3
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|X | | |8. |Materials used for boxing products for shipment overseas (units are not normally boxed) | |X | |9. |Advertising costs | |X | |10. |Workers’ compensation insurance for factory employees
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Chapter 5: Cost Behavior: Analysis and Use As we shall see in later chapters‚ the ability to predict how costs respond to changes in activity is critical for making decisions‚ controlling operations‚ and evaluating performance. Three major classifications of costs were discussed in this chapter—variable‚ fixed‚ and mixed. Mixed costs consist of variable and fixed elements and can be expressed in equation form as Y = a + bX‚ where X is the activity‚ Y is the cost‚ a is the fixed cost element‚ and
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Chapter 1 Managerial Accounting: Tools for Decision Making Discussion QUESTIONS Q1-1. Financial accounting is oriented toward external users and is concerned with general-purpose financial statements. These financial accounting statements are highly aggregated‚ report on relatively long time periods‚ are oriented toward the past‚ and must conform to external standards. These standards emphasize the use of objective data. Management accounting is oriented toward internal users and is
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Exercise 11-1 (10 minutes) 1. 2. 3. Exercise 11-2 (10 minutes) Average operating assets £2‚200‚000 Net operating income £400‚000 Minimum required return: 16% × £2‚200‚000 352‚000 Residual income £ 48‚000 Exercise 11-3 (20 minutes) 1. Throughput time = Process time + Inspection time + Move time + Queue time = 2.8 days + 0.5 days + 0.7 days + 4.0 days = 8.0 days 2. Only process time is value-added time; therefore the manufacturing cycle efficiency
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Garrison Managerial Accounting Solutions (PDF Documents) provides by doc.biasbias.com And hosted at /doc11/Garrison_Managerial_Accounting_Solutions.pdf Garrison Managerial Accounting Solutions Table of Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Managerial Accounting Garrison Noreen Brewer 14th Edition ... Managerial accounting 14th edition garrison solutions - free eBooks Managerial Accounting: Ray Garrison‚ Eric Noreen‚ Peter Brewer ... Managerial Accounting with Connect Plus: Ray Garrison‚ Eric
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CHAPTER 3 Product Costing and Cost Accumulation in a Batch Production Environment ANSWERS TO REVIEW QUESTIONS 3-1 (a) Use in financial accounting: In financial accounting‚ product costs are needed to determine the value of inventory on the balance sheet and to compute the cost-of-goods-sold expense on the income statement. b) Use in managerial accounting: In managerial accounting‚ product costs are needed for planning‚ for cost control‚ and for decision making. c) Use in cost
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to bonds payable on balance sheet. Income bonds payableClassify as long-term liability on balance sheet. EXERCISE 14-3 (15-20 minutes) 1.Paul Simon Company(a)1/1/04Cash 200‚000 Bonds Payable 200‚000(b)7/1/04Bond Interest Expense 4‚500 (200‚000 X 9 X 3/12) Cash 4‚500(c)12/31/04Bond Interest Expense 4‚500 Interest Payable 4‚500 2.Graceland Company(a)6/1/04Cash 105‚000 Bonds Payable 100‚000 Bond Interest Expense 5‚000 (100‚000 X 12 X 5/12)(b)7/1/04Bond Interest Expense 6‚000 Cash 6‚000 (100
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Inventories Additional Valuation Issues ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) TopicsQuestionsBrief ExercisesExercisesProblems Concepts for Analysis1.Lower-of-cost-or-market.1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 61‚ 2‚ 31‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 5‚ 61‚ 2‚ 3‚ 9‚ 101‚ 2‚ 3‚ 52.Inventory accounting changes relative sales value method net real-izable value.7‚ 847‚ 83.Purchase commitments.95‚ 69‚ 10964.Gross profit method.10‚ 11‚ 12‚ 13711‚ 12‚ 13‚ 14‚ 15‚ 16‚ 174‚ 55.Retail inventory method.14‚ 15‚ 16818‚ 19‚ 20‚ 22‚ 23‚ 266‚ 7‚ 8
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9 Sinusoidal Steady State Analysis Assessment Problems AP 9.1 [a] V = 170/−40◦ V [b] 10 sin(1000t + 20◦ ) = 10 cos(1000t − 70◦ ) . ·. I = 10/−70◦ A [c] I = 5/36.87◦ + 10/−53.13◦ = 4 + j3 + 6 − j8 = 10 − j5 = 11.18/−26.57◦ A [d] sin(20‚000πt + 30◦ ) = cos(20‚000πt − 60◦ ) Thus‚ V = 300/45◦ − 100/−60◦ = 212.13 + j212.13 − (50 − j86.60) = 162.13 + j298.73 = 339.90/61.51◦ mV AP 9.2 [a] v = 18.6 cos(ωt − 54◦ ) V [b] I = 20/45◦ − 50/ − 30◦ = 14.14 + j14.14 − 43.3 + j25 = −29.16 + j39.14 = 48.81/126
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