Being the president of your firm

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 1: Q 1-3, 1-4, 1-13, 1-14, & 1-15.
P: 1-1 & 1-5.
1-3 The president of your firm, Lesky and Lesky, has little background in accounting. Today, he walked into your office and said, “A year ago we bought a piece of land for $100,000. This year, inflation has driven prices up by 6%, and an appraiser just told us we could easily resell the land for $115,000. Yet our balance sheet still shows it at $100,000. It should be valued at $115,000. That’s what it’s worth. Or, at a minimum, at $106,000.” Respond to this statement with specific reference to the accounting principles applicable in this situation.

1-4 Identify the accounting principle(s) applicable to each of the following situations: a. Tim Roberts owns a bar and a rental apartment and operates a consulting service. He has separate financial statements for each. b. An advance collection for magazine subscriptions is reported as a liability titled Unearned Subscriptions. c. Purchases for office or store equipment for less than $25 are entered in Miscellaneous Expense. d. A company uses the lower of cost or market for valuation of its inventory. e. Partially completed television sets are carried at the sum of the cost incurred to date. f. Land purchased 15 years ago for $40,500 is now worth $346,000. It is still carried on the books at $40,500. g. ZeroCorporationisbeingsuedfor$1millionfor breach of contract. Its lawyers believe that the damages will be minimal. Zero reports the possible loss in a note.

Q 1-13 An arbitrary write-off of inventory can be justified under the conservatism concept. Is this statement true or false? Discuss.

Q 1-14 Inventory that has a market value below the historical cost should be written down in order to recognize a loss. Comment.

Q 1-15 There are other acceptable methods of recognizing revenue when the point of sale is not acceptable. List and discuss the other methods reviewed in this chapter, and indicate when they can be use

1-1 FASB Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts No. 2 indicates several qualitative characteristics of useful accounting information. Following is a list of some of these qualities, as well as a list of statements and phrases describing the qualities.
a. Benefits > costs
b. Decision usefulness
c. Relevance
d. Reliability
e. Predictive value, feedback value, timeliness
f. Verifiability, neutrality, representational faithfulness
g. Comparability
h. Materiality
i. Relevance, reliability

1. Without usefulness, there would be no benefits from information to set against its cost.
2. Pervasive constraint imposed on financial accounting information.
3. Constraint that guides the threshold for recognition.
4. A quality requiring that the information be timely and that it also have predictive value, feedback value, or both.
5. A quality requiring that the information have representational faithfulness and that it be verifiable and neutral.
6. These are the two primary qualities that make accounting information useful for decision making. 7. These are the ingredients needed to ensure that the information is relevant.
8. These are the ingredients needed to ensure that the information is reliable.
9. Includes consistency and interacts with relevance and reliability to contribute to the usefulness of information.

 

Chapter 2: P 2-1, P 2-6 & P 2-9.
2-1 Mike Szabo Company engaged in the following transactions during the month of December

2 Made credit sales of $4,000 (accepted accounts receivable).
6 Made cash sales of $2,500. Paid office salaries of $500.
10 Sold land that originally cost $2,200 for $3,000 cash.
14 Paid $6,000 for equipment. Billed clients $900 for services (accepted accounts receivable).
24 Collected $1,200 on an account receivable.
28 Paid an account payable of $70

Required Record the transactions, using T-account

 

 

 

Sample Solution

eology in Europe, and the consequent corrosion of the security attached to the domestic household. Krogstad is introduced as he enters through an unlocked door in the Helmer’s household “Now the door is pushed ajar, and Krogstad appears.” (130). Like Sandip, Krogstad’s arrival is sudden and unforeseen. By focusing on the unlocked door, it is clear to see that the bourgeoise household is defenceless in keeping intruders out. It is a facade of security that is easily compromised. Furthermore, Krogstad’s silent observation of Nora’s game with her children “what shall we play? Hide and seek?” (129) provides an unsettling sense of voyeurism as he intrudes on an emphatically private moment. This casts Nora’s household from its preconceived notions of seclusion and exposes it to be scrutinized by the outside world. Nicholas Grene extends this line of thought by stating that “the revolutionary innovation of Ibsen’s A Doll’s House was to turn that scene of the glass-walled conservatory the other way around, to put the audience of the play in the position of the townspeople, gazing in at the middle-class marital home.” (16). Grene’s point is a significant one as it illuminates the importance of staging in corroding the distinct lines between the interior and exterior world. The set of the bourgeoise household may be constructed to appear superficially private but it is, in fact, a stage. This means that it is designed for the sole purpose of being gazed upon and dissected. In this sense, there is a definitive and noticeable breach between the domestic household and the external world as the audience observes the bourgeoise home. This, Branislav Jakovljevic posits, means that “the reality of the stage is always measured against the truth of the outside world.” (432). In oth

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