German Accounting - GPK Leave it to the Germans to develop a costing model based on detail‚ precision and improving overall control. Flexible Analytic Cost Planning and Accounting (GPK) is a powerful tool‚ having withstood 60 years of alternative methodologies and widespread hands-on use across Europe. In manufacturing companies‚ particularly those with a homogenous product line‚ GPK can be used to define the effects of resource consumption to the bottom line while greatly illustrating to management
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Introduction According to a team of US scientists led by David Lobell‚ of Stanford University‚ due to climate change‚ directly influence in rainfall and temperature and result in yields of agriculture and increasing price of necessary food. Their findings indicate that‚ from 1980 to 2008‚ climate change declined global wheat output by 5.5% and corn output by 3.8%‚ compared to growth projections without warming (Anonymous‚ 2011). However‚ their research is only a little part of ice. Like ice shelf
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Introduction to Accounting Instructor : M. Morshed (MDM) Senior Lecturer‚ School of Business. Semester : FALL Year : 2012 Submitted by Robiul Hassan Labib ID – 1220296030. | | | | Question 1: Explain using various examples‚ how the major accounting concepts
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Introduction to Accounting Coursework Ratio Analysis of Tesco and Sainsbury Introduction This report details the results of a ratio analysis of two of the largest retailers in the UK: Sainsbury and Tesco based on their audited financial statements for the financial years ending 2011‚ 2012‚ and 2013. The two companies are compared with each other based on their profitability and liquidity ratios. This report then critically interprets the results of the ratio analysis calculations and then discusses
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CHAPTER 9 Reporting and Analyzing Long-Lived Assets ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS 1. For plant assets‚ the cost principle states that plant assets are recorded at cost‚ which consists of all expenditures necessary to acquire the asset and make it ready for its intended use. 2. In a cash transaction‚ cost is equal to the cash paid. In a noncash transaction‚ cost is equal to the cash equivalent price paid‚ which is the fair market value of the asset given up or the fair market value of the asset received
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Fazeel Tariq Baig Student Id: FT 26487 Course: Accounting Dated: 15/11/2012 Submitted to: Sir Asad 2. Classify the following list into primary‚ secondary‚ tertiary sector Business. 1. A Mining company: Is a Primary Sector Business. 2. An Advertising Agency: Is a Tertiary Sector Business. 3. A New paper publishing company: Is a Primary Sector Business. 4. A Caning Factory: Is a Primary Sector Business. 5. A News Paper Delivery: Is a Tertiary Sector
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Chapter 21 Audit of the Inventory and Warehousing Cycle Review Questions 21-1 Inventory is often the most difficult and time consuming part of many audit engagements because: 1. Inventory is generally a major item on the balance sheet and often the largest item making up the accounts included in working capital. 2. The need for organizations to have the inventory in diverse locations makes the physical control and counting of the inventory difficult. 3. Inventory takes many different
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Q1: There are two different types of cost accounting systems: Job order cost systems and process cost systems. How does management decide whether to use a job order cost system or a process cost system in any given manufacturing situation? Explain. Job order cost system is used in situations where many different products are produced each period. For example‚ a Levi Strauss clothing factory would typically make many different types of jeans for both men and women during a month. A particular order
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American Accounting Association DOI: 10.2308/acch.2010.24.2.279 Accounting Horizons Vol. 24‚ No. 2 2010 pp. 279–296 COMMENTARY The American Accounting Association’s Financial Reporting Policy Committee’s Response to the Preliminary Views on Financial Statement Presentation The Financial Reporting Policy Committee of the Financial Accounting and Reporting Section of the American Accounting Association Mark Bradshaw‚ Carolyn Callahan‚ Jack Ciesielski‚ Elizabeth Gordon‚ Mark Kohlbeck
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Early Detection = $ Saved Accounting Anomalies Accounting Anomalies Faulty Journal Entries Inaccuracies in the Ledgers Ledger Doesn’t Balance Doesn’ Master or Control Accounts Do Not Equal the Sum of Individual Customer or Vendor Accounts 1 Recognize Internal Control Weaknesses Lack of Segregation of Duties Lack of Physical Safeguards Lack of Independent Checks & Reviews Lack of Proper Authorization Overriding of Existing Controls Inadequate Accounting System Common Examples
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