| |Purpose of Accounting |Communicating financial information to end users so they can make informed decisions. | |Accounting Entity |The financial affairs of the business are separate and distinct from the financial affairs of the owner. | |Monetary Concept |All transactions are recorded in a common dollar term such as the New Zealand dollar. | |Historical Cost Concept |All transactions are recorded
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economic entity assumption states that economic events can be identified with a particular unit of accountability. FALSE 4. The monetary unit assumption states that transactions that can be measured in terms of money should be recorded in the accounting records. TRUE 5. The drawings account is a subdivision of the owner’s capital account and appears as an expense on the income statement. FALSE 6. Revenues are a subdivision of owner’s capital. TRUE 7. The trial balance has no
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Coursework BBM – Financial Accounting (FIN 2241) SHARIFUDDIN HAZIQ BIN ABDUL AZIZ SCM 022587 Ms. Janice Contents No. | Title | Pages | 1 | Executive summary | 2 | 2 | Question 1 | Introduction | 3 | | | Sole Proprietorship | 4 | | | Partnership | 5 | | | Limited Liabilities Company | 6 | | | Accounting | 7 | | | Benefits of accounting | 7-9 | 3 | Question
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MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING Information for Decision-Making and Strategy Execution SIXTH EDITION Anthony A. Atkinson University of Waterloo Robert S. Kaplan Harvard University Ella Mae Matsumura University of Wisconsin–Madison S. Mark Young University of Southern California Boston Columbus Indianapolis New York San Francisco Upper Saddle River Amsterdam Cape Town Dubai London Madrid Milan Munich Paris Montreal Toronto Delhi Mexico City S~ Paulo Sydney Hong Kong Seoul Singapore
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occur under efficient operating conditions absorption costing all manufacturing costs are assigned to products: direct material‚ direct labour‚ variable and fixed manufacturing overhead acceptable quality level (AQL) the defect rate at which total quality costs are minimised account classification method (or account analysis) the process in which managers use their judgement to classify costs as fixed‚ variable or semivariable costs accounting rate of return (or simple rate of return‚ rate of return on
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What is Forensic Accounting? The integration of accounting‚ auditing and investigative skills yields the speciality known as Forensic Accounting. "Forensic"‚ according to the Webster’s Dictionary means‚ "Belonging to‚ used in or suitable to courts of judicature or to public discussion and debate." "Forensic Accounting"‚ provides an accounting analysis that is suitable to the court which will form the basis for discussion‚ debate and ultimately dispute resolution. Forensic Accounting encompasses both
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Problem 1-4 Managers need accounting information and need to know how to use it. Critically evaluate this statement. Accounting information provides managers with data needed to determine whether a business is at a profit or a loss‚ how much debtors owe‚ company’s liabilities‚ and much other financial information. Accounting measures business transactions and as such can help direct managers in the right course with concrete information. Principally accounting information is a tool for managers
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| |7. |Of the two methods of accounting for uncollectible receivables‚ the allowance method provides in advance for uncollectible | | | |receivables. |True False | |8. |Generally accepted accounting principles do not normally allow the use of the direct write-off method of accounting for |
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TEST BANK IN CASH – LEGAL SIZE ACCNTFI MR. ALBNERT C. CHAN‚ BSC‚ CPA‚ MBA 3RD TERM DLS-CSB Ex. 173 The cash balance per books for Dexter Company on September 30‚ 2008 is $10‚740.93. The following checks and receipts were recorded for the month of October‚ 2008: Checks Receipts No. Amount No. Amount Amount Date 17 $372.96 22 $ 578.84 $843.86 10/ 5 18 $780.62 23 $1‚687.50 $941.54 10/21 19 $157.00 24 $ 921.30 $808.58 10/27 20 $587.50 25 $ 246.03 $967.00 10/30 21 $234
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11.2 a. Determine the current value of the bond if present market conditions justify a 14 percent required rate of return. PV = CF^n / (1 +i) ^n PV = CF n / (1 + i)^4 PV = 70 / (1 + .14) ^4 PV = 70 / (1.14) ^4 PV = 70/ 1.14 + 70/ 1.30 + 70/ 1.48 + 70/ 1.69 PV = 61.40 + 53.85 + 47.30 + 41.42 = $203.97 PV of the par value = 1‚000 PV = $203.97 + 1‚000 = $1203.97 b. Now‚ suppose Twin Oaks’ four-year bond had semiannual coupon payments. What would be its current value? (Assume a 7 percent
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