Question 1 The differences between managerial accounting and financial accounting can be distinguished through 5 aspects: a) Primary Users of Reports In managerial accounting‚ the information will be use within the organization‚ by the employees and managers‚ where else in financial accounting‚ the information in the reports will be used by external parties such as banks‚ creditors and shareholders. b) Types and frequency of the reports. In managerial accounting‚ the information is
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Key Figures for the Exercises‚ Problems and Cases To Accompany Managerial Accounting Creating Value in a Dynamic Business Environment 9th Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin 2011 by Ronald W. Hilton CHAPTER 1 No key figures. CHAPTER 2 E 2-24 Beginning inventory of finished goods‚ case I: $84‚000 E 2-25 1. Total compensation: $720 E 2-26 2. Total overtime premium: $20 E 2-29 2. Cost of goods sold: $820‚000 E 2-30 (f) $77‚000 (o) $110 E 2-31 2. Cost per call
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(MCE) is: 3. If the MCE is 35%‚ then 35% of throughput time was spent in value-added activities‚ the other 65% was spent in non-value-added activities. 4. Delivery cycle time = Wait time + Throughput time = 16.0 days + 8.0 days = 24.0 days 5. If all queue time is eliminated‚ then the throughput time drops to only 4 days (0.5 + 2.8 + 0.7). The MCE becomes: Thus‚ the MCE increases to 70%. This exercise shows quite dramatically how lean production approach can improve
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airline miles‚ free hotel stays‚ a variety of on-property benefits and services game players corporation Hilton: managed by Hilton hotels corporation and Hilton international 492 hotels‚ 154000 rooms revenues of $158 per night per guest occupancy exceeded break-even well-recognized brand HHoners program: 4 membership tiers-- blue‚ silver‚ gold‚ diamond double dipping competition Hilton‚ Starwood‚ Hyatt & Marriott (chart) Starwood preferred guest program No blackout dates No capacity control
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Reporting & Analysis TUTORIAL - WEEK 10 Accounting for Financial Instruments and Foreign Currency Transactions Learning Objectives: 1. Understand what is a financial instrument‚ and how can they be categorised. 2. Accounting for a particular type of financial instrument – a “compound instrument” 3. Understand the accounting treatments of foreign currency transactions at: Date of transaction; Balance date (if applicable); Settlement date. 4. Analyse the accounting treatment of foreign exchange
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Case Study | Hilton The challenge Facing intense competition to secure high calibre graduates‚ Hilton International were keen to radically overhaul their approach to the recruitment and selection of management trainees. Equally critical for the future success of the business was the need to introduce an accelerated management training and development scheme which would significantly reduce the typical 15-20 year timeframe for a new recruit to reach the level of an international Hotel General
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Chapter 17 Accounting and Reporting for the Federal Government True / False Questions 1. Responsibility for setting accounting and reporting standards for federal agencies rests primarily with the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board. True False 2. By law‚ federal agencies must incorporate the accounting standards (GAAP) established for the federal government into their financial management systems. True False 3. The objectives of federal financial reporting
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1) As you have learned in this week’s readings the Accounting Equation is Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ Equity. Is the accounting equation true in all instances? Provide sample transactions from your own experiences to demonstrate the validity of the Accounting Equation. 2) What does the term account mean? What are the different classifications of accounts? How do the rules for debits and credits impact accounts? Please provide an example of how debits and credits impact accounts.
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ACCT1501 S12012 W2 Tutorial Questions Tutorial Questions: DQ 2.6‚ 2.10; Problems 2.7‚ 2.22‚ 2.27 DQ2.6 a. A balance sheet can indicate whether a company is financially sound by a comparison of the amount of finance raised by debt with the amount raised from owners. The higher the proportion raised by the debt‚ the higher the risk to the creditors. The working capital‚ i.e. current assets less current liabilities indicates a company’s ability to pay its bills on time. This assumes that the
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PROBLEM 1. The Huyden Company builds equipment to customer’s specifications. On March 1‚ two jobs were in process with the following costs and information: | Job 43 | Job 44 | Direct materials | $10‚200 | $34‚400 | Direct labor | 21‚000 | 10‚400 | Applied overhead* | 4‚950 | 7‚370 | Total cost | $36‚150 | $52‚170 | | | | Machine hours | 45 | 67 | *Applied on the basis of machine hours During March‚ Job 45 was started and Job 44 was completed and delivered to
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