B.A project are: 1) It gives Full Corporation and decision making among students so they can be involved in the actual operation of a small business. 2) It gives students great experience in recording‚ analyzing‚ interpreting and communication accounting information. Page 2 LIST OF TRANSACTIONS 1ST TRANSACTION: 2013 September 1 – The business commenced with following assets and liabilities: Cash - $10000 Bank - $30000 Motor Van - $6000 Stationery - $8000 Furniture - $6000
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costs Labor costs of assembly-line workers $110‚000 – Direct labor Sales commissions $35‚000 – Period costs Factory supplies used $13‚000 – Direct materials Salaries paid to sales clerks $50‚000 – Period costs (b) Explain the basic difference in accounting for product costs and period costs. Product costs are manufacturing costs‚ direct components‚ direct labor and manufacturing overhead‚ do not become expenditures until the company sells inventory. Period costs are non-manufacturing costs‚ including
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slight increase in accounts receivable reflecting the timing of seasonal sales at the end of 2011 as compared with 2010. Although its primary credit risk concentrates on two clients‚ McLane and Wal-Mart‚ its accounts receivable turnover is increasing. It means Hershey’s collection ability is good. Accounts Receivable—Trade In the normal course of business‚ we extend credit to customers that satisfy pre-defined credit criteria based upon the results of our recurring financial account reviews and our
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Question 1 Use the data below to answer Parts (a) through (c). Show all calculations in your solutions. On January 1‚ 20X2‚ Haika Inc. purchased 60% of the outstanding voting shares of Selina Co. for $3‚000‚000. On that date‚ Selina’s shareholders’ equity consisted of retained earnings of $2‚000‚000 and ordinary shares of $1‚000‚000. Selina’s identifiable assets and liabilities had fair values that were equal to their carrying values on January 1‚ 20X2‚ except for the following: | Fair value
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THE PARETO PRINCIPLE: ITS USE AND ABUSE Robert Sanders Vilfredo Pareto was a late nineteenth-century economist/sociologist who first noted and re- ported his observation that about 80 percent of wealth was concentrated in about 20 percent of a population. This is the basis for what we now call the Pareto Principle. J. M. Juran‚ one of the foremost practitioners of statistical quality control‚ claims credit for giving the Pareto principle its name. Juran’s Pareto Principle is sometimes known as
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Comparing Accounting Software Programs to Manual Accounting Manual accounting uses several paper ledgers to record financial transactions. It is very time consuming to record each single transaction onto paper‚ being very cautious not to make an error. There are several ledgers for each part of the accounting system‚ such as accounts payable‚ accounts receivable‚ and revenue accounts. Combining these ledgers into one general ledger‚ provide the balance for each ledger. The general ledger
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Chapter 1 & 2 Summary Accounting is a process of identifying‚ measuring‚ and communicating economic information to permit informed judgments and decisions by users of the information. It is a service activity and the language of business. Its main function is to provide qualitative information that is intended to be useful in making economic decisions. The Accounting process is a series of repetitive activities of recording‚ summarizing and reporting economic transactions from the beginning
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ACG 5308 / Accounting‚ Planning and Control /Smith/ Kanthal (A) Cooper‚ R. & Kaplan‚ R. S. (1999). The Design of Cost Management Systems: Text and Cases (Second Edition). Upper Saddle River‚ New Jersey: Prentice Hall. {Pp. 355-362} Provide complete‚ well-documented responses to each of the following items. A. Describe Kanthal’s competitive position and strategy and operating problems. B. Describe the design‚ strengths‚ and weaknesses of Kanthal’s existing (old) cost accounting system. C. Describe
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References: Warren‚ C.‚ Reeve‚ J.‚ and Duchac‚ J (2007). Accounting. 23rd ed South-Western‚ cengage learning in thousands except share data | January 3‚ 2009 | December 29‚ in thousands except share data | December 29‚ 2007 | December30‚
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inggLecturer’s Guide Accounting for Non-accounting Students Sixth edition J R Dyson ISBN 0 273 68301 2 © Pearson Education Limited 2004 Lecturers adopting the main text are permitted to download the manual as required. Pearson Education Limited Edinburgh Gate Harlow Essex CM20 2JE England and Associated Companies around the world Visit us on the World Wide Web at: www.pearsoned.co.uk First published in Great Britain under the Pitman Publishing imprint in 1997 Second edition published
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