Agenda – Submit term projects to TURNITIN ASAP – Assignment #2 due April 1st 1159pm • List the coauthor’s name in the subject line. • Teaching Evaluation • Transfer pricing (cont.) – Stanco Inc. • Review chapters 11 and 12 & the practice final – Practice Q1 and Q2 • Review chapters 8 and 9 and the practice final – Practice Q3 and Q4 ACTG 2020 Week 11 1 • Online Course Evaluations (ONCE)/ & Seymour Schulich Teaching Excellence Awards (Schulich TEA) – TEA: http://schulich.yorku.ca/tea. – ONCE:
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Course: Managerial Accounting (ACCTG 4B) – Fall 2014 Lab Assignment No: 8 (Chapter 23) Assignment Due Date: 10/30/14 by 6:00AM Instructions Complete the following problems; make sure to include your calculations. Any incomplete work or partially completed will automatically receive zero points. PART I: Herron Company has budgeted the following unit sales: 2008 Units April 25‚000 May 50‚000 June 75‚000 July 45‚000 Of the units budgeted‚ 40% are sold by the Southern Division at an average
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CHAPTER 10 Cash Flows and Other Topics in Capital Budgeting ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS 10-1. We focus on cash flows rather than accounting profits because these are the flows that the firm receives and can reinvest. Only by examining cash flows are we able to correctly analyze the timing of the benefit or cost. Also‚ we are only interested in these cash flows on an after tax basis as only those flows are available to the shareholder. In addition‚ it is only the incremental
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CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO COST ACCOUNTING QUESTIONS 1. Management accounting stresses the informational needs of internal users over those of external users (the focus of financial accounting). Because of this perspective‚ management accounting provides information in a format that is flexible and relevant to a particular manager‟s usage. Financial accounting‚ on the other hand‚ must provide some uniformity in the manner in which information is presented for it to be comparable among companies and
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Cost Accounting - Chapter 1 1. Flexibility is said to be the hallmark of modern management accounting‚ whereas standardization and consistency describe financial accounting. Explain why the focus of those two accounting systems differs. Financial accounting is more about the bigger picture—it evaluates the finances of the organization as a whole‚ using historical‚ quantitative‚ monetary‚ and factual data. It is more formal and requires the use of GAAP. The information financial accounting
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1380 0 $ 1380 Total cost $ 461 380 $ 469 200 ($ 7820) If Waterways adds that amount to the cost of making the small fitting‚ the total cost still less than buying cost. The company would manufacturing the small fitting and buy the timing units. Part 3 Instruction Given the information above‚ what are the consequence of Waterways replacing the machine that is slowing down production because of breakdown? Current Machine Produces - 50 units per day New Machines Produce - 100 units per day Manufacturing
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CHAPTER 1 THE ACCOUNTANT’S ROLE IN THE ORGANIZATION TRUE/FALSE 1. Management accounting information focuses on external reporting. Answer: False Difficulty: 1 Objective: 1 Terms to Learn: management accounting Management accounting information focuses on internal reporting. 2. A good cost accounting system is narrowly focused on a continuous reduction of costs. Answer: False Difficulty: 2 Objective: 1 Terms to Learn: cost accounting A good cost accounting system
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Chapter 4 — Intro—1 1 CHAPTER 3 Topic Scopes: Stoichiometry and Solution Concentration • Molarity‚ molality‚ parts per million & percentage (w/w‚ w/v and v/v) • Stoichiometry calculation • Limiting reactant • Theoretical yield‚ actual yield and percentage yield 1 2 Mole Concept No. of Moles = Molarity (M) • Molarity (molar concentration) is the number of moles of a solute that is contained in 1 liter of solution Mass (g) molar mass (g/mol) No. of Moles = Molarity (mol/L) volume (L) Molarity
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CHAPTER 3 The Accounting Information System ASSIGNMENT CLASSIFICATION TABLE (BY TOPIC) Topics Questions 1. Transaction identification. 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8 2. Nominal accounts. 4‚ 7 3. Trial balance. 6‚ 10 4. Adjusting entries. 8‚ 11‚ 13‚ 14 5. Financial statements. 6. Closing. 12 7. Inventory and cost of goods sold. 9 8. Comprehensive accounting cycle. *9. Brief Exercises Exercises Problems 1‚ 2 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4‚ 17 1 2‚ 3‚ 4 1‚ 2‚ 7‚ 8 5‚ 6‚ 7‚ 8‚ 9‚ 10‚ 20 1‚ 2‚ 3‚ 4
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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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