OL3210--Principles of Managerial Accounting—unit 2 complete There are various ways that financial statement information is presented in this article on Nokia. The first way I see is in the Good News section on page 1 “the bulk of its revenues—more than quadrupled‚ from $2.1 billion in 1993 to $8.7 billion last year (1997)‚” and on say “the recent June quarter surging to $616 million‚ up 76% from the same quarter in 1997” this is an partial example of an horizontal analysis (Stone‚ 1998). A horizontal
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TEST QUESTIONS: Questions 1-3 refer to the following: The following selected data for March were taken from Rubenstein Company’s financial statements: Cost of goods available for sale Manufacturing overhead Cost of goods manufactured Finished goods inventory ‑ ending Direct materials used Sales Selling and administrative expenses Direct labor Work in process inventory ‑ beginning $ 65‚000 20‚000 51‚000 10‚000 15‚000 105‚000 30‚000 20‚000 0 1. The gross
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Decision-making plays a large role in every company’s success. Business professionals should be concerned with how decisions affect workers‚ the local economy‚ other businesses‚ and profits. Satisfying all of these criteria is difficult‚ so which factor is the most important? Should a company solely concern itself with profits? How would the Bible apply to these factors? I believe every company changes their decision making skills based on the situation. Sometimes it is more important to
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Financial accounting reports are prepared for the use of external parties such as shareholders and creditors‚ whereas managerial accounting reports are prepared for managers inside the organization. This contrast in basic orientation results in a number of major differences between financial and managerial accounting‚ even though both financial and managerial accounting often rely on the same underlying financial data. In addition to the to the differences in who the reports are prepared for
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Accounting chapter 7 managerial accounting Exercises Lambert Fabrication‚ Inc.‚ uses activity-based costing data for internal decisions. The company has the following four activity cost pools: Activity Cost Pool Annual Activity Producing units 5‚000 machine-hours Processing orders 1‚000 orders Customer support 200 customers Other Not applicable The "Other" activity cost pool consists of the costs of idle capacity and organization-sustaining costs. The company traces the costs of direct
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Cost Accounting‚ 14e‚ Global Edition (Horngren/Datar/Rajan) Chapter 12 Pricing Decisions and Cost Management Objective 12.1 1) Companies should only produce and sell units as long as: A) there is customer demand for the product B) the competition allows it C) the revenue from an additional unit exceeds the cost of producing it D) there is a generous supply of low-cost direct materials Answer: C Diff: 2 Terms: target price Objective: 1 AACSB: Ethical reasoning 2) Too high a price may: A)
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managerial accounting 9th edition‚Ronald 03. Sadler Corporation purchased equipment to be used in manufacturing. The purchase was made at the beginning of 2006 by paying cash of $150 000. The equipment has an estimated residual value of 10‚000 and an expected useful life of 10 years. At the beginning of 2008‚ Sadler concluded that the total useful life of the equipment will be 8 years rather than 10‚ and that the residual value will be zero. Sadler uses the straight-line method for depreciation
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1.Managerial accounting vs financial accounting Managerial accounting information system is an information system that produces outputs using inputs and processes needed to satisfy specific managerial objectives. How do management accounting and financial accounting differ? Management Accounting Financial Accounting 1. Internally focused
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Management Accounting MULTIPLE CHOICE C 1. One of the objectives of management accounting is to provide a. stockholders and potential investors with useful information for decision making b. banks and other creditors with information useful in making credit decisions c. management with information useful for planning and controlling operations d. the Internal Revenue Service with information about taxable income p. 004 D 2. Management accounting is concerned
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Disadvantages of Participative Budgeting Participative Budgeting is the situation in which budgets are designed and set after input from subordinate managers‚ instead of merely being imposed. The idea behind this sort of budgeting is to assign responsibility to subordinate managers and place a form of personal ownership on the final budget. Nearly two decades of management accounting research has resulted in equivocal findings on the consequences and effects of participative budgeting (Lindquist 1995). Participative
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