...To download more slides, ebooks, solution manual and test bank, visit http://downloadslide.blogspot.com Solutions Manual COST ACCOUNTING © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. SM Cost Accounting 14/e by Horngren © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. SM Cost Accounting 14/e by Horngren To download more slides, ebooks, solution manual and test bank, visit http://downloadslide.blogspot.com Solutions Manual COST ACCOUNTING Fourteenth Edition Charles T. Horngren Srikant M. Datar Madhav Rajan Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. SM Cost Accounting 14/e by Horngren This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their courses and assessing student learning. Dissemination or sale of any part of this work (including on the World Wide Web) will destroy the integrity of the work and is not permitted. The work and materials from it should never be made available to students except by instructors using the accompanying text in their classes. All recipients of this work are expected to abide by these restrictions and to honor the intended pedagogical purposes and the needs of other instructors who rely on these materials. Acquisition Editor: Stephanie Wall Editorial Project Manager: Christina Rumbaugh Editorial Assistant: Brian Reilly Project Manager, Production:...
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...ACCT 312 Intermediate Accounting III – Entire Course http://hwguiders.com/downloads/acct-312-intermediate-accounting-iii-entire-course/ ACCT 312 Intermediate Accounting III Complete Homework Sets ACCT 312 Week 1 Homework Chapter 16, Exercise 16-3, 16-5, 16-10,16-22 ACCT 312 Week 2 Homework Chapter 17, Exercise 17-5, 17-10, 17-12, 17-15 ACCT 312 Week 3 Homework Chapter 18, Exercise 18-5, 18-11, 18-13, 18-19 ACCT 312 Week 4 Homework Chapter 19, Exercise 19-2, 19-5, 19-10, 19-17 ACCT 312 Week 5 Homework Chapter 20, E20-1, E20-10, E20-17, E20-24 ACCT 312 Week 6 Homework Chapter 21, E21-14, E21-21, P21-4] ACCT 312 Week 7 Homework Problems P21-5, P21-6 ACCT 312 Intermediate Accounting III Complete Quizzes ACCT 312 Week 1 Quiz 1. (TCO 1) Which causes a temporary difference between taxable and pretax accounting income? 2. (TCO 1) Which difference between financial accounting and tax accounting ordinarily creates a deferred tax liability? 3. (TCO 1) Which temporary difference ordinarily creates a deferred tax asset? 4. (TCO 1) Under current tax law, a net operating loss may be carried forward up to 5. (TCO 1) Which causes a permanent difference between taxable income and pretax accounting income? ACCT 312 Week 2 Quiz 1. (TCO 2) Which causes a temporary difference between taxable and pretax accounting income? 2. (TCO 2) Which statement typifies defined contribution plans? 3. (TCO 2) Which is not a way of measuring the pension obligation...
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...Solutions Manual COST ACCOUNTING Fifteenth Edition Charles T. Horngren Srikant M. Datar Madhav V. Rajan ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- Acquisitions Editor: Ellen Geary ------------------------------------------------- Editorial Project Manager: Nicole Sam ------------------------------------------------- Editorial Assistant: Christine Donovan ------------------------------------------------- Project Manager: Roberta Sherman ------------------------------------------------- Supplements Project Manager: Andra Skaalrud ------------------------------------------------- Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying...
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...CHAPTER 5 ACCOUNTING FOR MERCHANDISING BUSINESSES DISCUSSION QUESTIONS 1. Merchandising businesses acquire merchandise for resale to customers. It is the selling of merchandise, instead of a service, that makes the activities of a merchandising business different from the activities of a service business. Yes. Gross profit is the excess of (net) sales over cost of merchandise sold. A net loss arises when operating expenses exceed gross profit. Therefore, a business can earn a gross profit but incur operating expenses in excess of this gross profit and end up with a net loss. The date of sale as shown by the date of the invoice or bill. a. b. c. 5. 6. a. 1% discount allowed if paid within 15 days of date of invoice; entire amount of invoice due within 60 days of date of invoice. Payment due within 30 days of date of invoice. Payment due by the end of the month in which the sale was made. A credit memo issued by the seller of merchandise indicates the amount for which the buyer’s account is to be credited (credit to Accounts Receivable) and the reason for the sales return or allowance. A debit memo issued by the buyer of merchandise indicates the amount for which the seller’s account is to be debited (debit to Accounts Payable) and the reason for the purchases return or allowance. The buyer The seller 2. 3. 4. Sales to customers who use MasterCard or VISA cards are recorded as cash sales. b. 7. 8. 9. 10. a. b. Examples of such accounts include the following:...
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...|Topic in Mastery of the |Chapter 3 - Building Your |Chapter 4 – Brain Teasers: Using|Chapter 5 – Cases to Accompany | |Financial Accounting Research |Business Vocabulary: Defining |FARS to Untangle the Mystery |FARS [Related Assignments at End| |System (FARS) Through Cases 2nd |Terms and Solving Problems |[See Introduction and Example |of Cases] | |Edition by Wallace [Chapter 1 |Through FARS [See Introduction |pp. 4-1 to 4-7] | | |and 2 where noted] |and Example pp. 3-1 to 3-7] | | | |FASB, Standard Setting; GAAP; |Table 3.1 Accounting Standards; |1: How Many Standards Have Been |Case 12: Emerging Issues: The | |Governance; FARS [Chapter 1 – |Table 3.39 Regulated Industry; |Issued by FASB?; 2: Dissents |Agenda of FASB; [Case 8 Related:| |The Financial Accounting |Table 3.40 Specialized Industry |Portending Future?; 32: What |Does It Matter Where Guidance Is| |Research System (FARS) Primer.] |Considerations |Makes One GAAP Preferable to |Located?]; [Case 12 Related: Are| | | |Another?; 30: When Can Analogies|Accounting Rules to Blame?] | | | |Be Used?; 31: What Are the 10 | | | ...
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...ACCOUNTING 525: MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING Winter Quarter 2003 INSTRUCTOR: Professor D. L. Jensen 428 Fisher Hall 292-2529 at office (Please leave recorded message; if I'm not in, I'll return your call.) jensen.7@osu.edu (I check my e-mail several times daily and will respond ASAP) OFFICE HOURS: By appointment or chance STUDENT ASSISTANT: Ms. Yun Jin (jin.81@osu.edu) REQUIRED TEXT AND SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS: Horngren, Foster and Datar, Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis, 11th edition, Prentice-Hall, 2003 (abbreviated H) (ISBN 0-13-064815-9) Supplementary materials (abbreviated [S]) are sold in a package by CopEz (Tuttle Store). Some supplementary items may be distributed in class or made available on the Internet. COURSE OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this course are to develop your understanding and critical facility in the application of measurement and analytical constructs employed in management accounting and your understanding of the organizational context of management accounting. COURSE METHOD: The course is organized around a textbook, supplementary materials, lectures, and in-class exercises and discussion. Written assignments include homework problems, in-class quizzes, and examinations. HOMEWORK PROBLEMS Assigned homework problems should be prepared prior to the class for which they are assigned; most homework will be discussed during that class, and students are encouraged to annotate their homework papers during class. Homework will be collected...
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...INTERMEDIATE ACCOUNTING I (ACC 221) 21 Aug 2013 - 15 Oct 2013 TEACHER: Dr. Joseph L. Ilk, CPA, CMA, CVA, CPCM TELEPHONE: Office: (703) 805-4473 Home: (540) 582-6008 E-mail: jilk@nvcc.edu If you e-mail me, please put “ACC 221" and either "E40W" or "E80W" ” in the subject line. If you do not I will not recognize the e-mail and will delete the file. The student needs to put their First and Last Name in the e-mail so I know who it came from. OFFICE HOURS: Mon-Fri 8:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.I check my e-mail (jilk@nvcc.edu) every day. NOVA IT Helpdesk: (703) 426-4141 CONNECT HELPDESK: (800) 331-5094 PRE-REQUISITES: ACC 212 - Principles of Accounting II I. THE COURSE: ACC 221, intermediate accounting covers accounting principles and theory, including a review of the accounting cycle and accounting for current assets, current liabilities, and investments. Introduces various accounting approaches and demonstrates the effect of these approaches on the financial statement users II. SCOPE: The study will cover but not be limited to the following areas: Theoretical structure of financial accounting Time value of money Review of the accounting process Cash and receivables Balance sheet Inventories Income statement Plant, property, and equipment Cash flow statement Investments Income measurement and profitability analysis III. Course Learning Objectives: * Comprehend the environment and theoretical...
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...Problem Set#1 Answers University Of Phoenix Chapter 1 No.10 a) Nominal – closing stock prizes given for the most researched stocks on March 3, 2008 in Forbes TMA $4.32 UTX $69.40 DBD $38.84 b) Ordinal - (Data taken from Forbes March 3, 2008) List of US cities in order as best places to get ahead are Stafford County, outside Washington, D.C., Forsyth County, outside of Atlanta; or Delaware County, outside Columbus, Ohio c) Interval - Temperature forecasted for Mechanicsville, VA at different hours from Richmond Dispatch Newspaper At 8.pm 60F, At 9.00PM 59F, At 10.00PM 57Ffr d) Ratio Level – Stock market data for IBM with variations from Forbes, March 3, 2008 Stock prize is $114. Change is +.37 with .32% No.16 a. Quantitative variables are selling price, No of bedrooms, and distance from the centre of the city. Township is qualitative b. Selling price –ratio No of bedrooms – Ordinal Township – Nominal Distance from the center of city - Ratio Chapter 2 No.26 a) 2k > no of observations 26 = 48 > 45 We recommend 6 classes b) Class interval ≥ (H – L)/K (570 – 41)/6 = 88. 16 We are selecting...
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...Course Outline RSM222H1S Management Accounting I Winter 2016 Class time, location, and instructor Tutorial time and location Instructor contact information L0301 L0401 L0501 L0601 L5101 L0101 L0901 L0201 L1001 L0701 L0801 L1101 T0101 T0201 T0301 T0401 T0501 T0601 T1201 T0701 T0801 T0901 T1001 T1101 Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Thursday Friday Friday Friday Friday Friday 10-12pm 12-2pm 2-4pm 4-6pm 6-8pm 2-4pm 4-6pm 6-8pm 8-10am 10-12pm 12-2pm 4-6pm 10-11am 11-12pm 12-1pm 1-2pm 2-3pm 3-4pm 4-5pm 9-10am 10-11am 11-12pm 12-1pm 1-2pm WO 25 WO 25 WO 25 WO 25 SS 2127 WO 20 WO 20 WO 20 WO 35 SS 1070 SS 2108 GB 244 SS 2110 SS 2110 WW 126 WW 126 WO 30 SS 562 UC 52 WO 30 WO 30 WO 30 WO 35 WO 35 Gus De Franco Gus De Franco Eszter Palancz Eszter Palancz Amy Kwan Eszter Palancz Amy Kwan Eszter Palancz Donna Losell Ross Lu Amy Kwan Amy Kwan Gus De Franco (course coordinator), Gus.Defranco@rotman.utoronto.ca Donna Losell, Losell@rotman.utoronto.ca Amy Kwan, amyk.kwan@utoronto.ca Eszter Palancz, Eszter.Palancz@Rotman.Utoronto.Ca Ross Lu, Ross.Lu12@Rotman.Utoronto.Ca 1 Office hours Gus De Franco Donna Losell Eszter Palancz Amy Kwan Ross Lu By appointment, RT537 By appointment, RT529 Wednesday 4:30pm-5:30pm,...
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...AP/ADMS 3585 3.0 Intermediate Accounting I Course Director : Section : Course website: Date/Time: Liona Lai, CA CPA, PH.D A and C Alla Volodina, CA CPA B Location : Instructor Office Hours: E-Mail Address : A: Friday 11am to Wednesday 7-10pm 2pm C: Friday 2pm to 5pm ACE 009 ACE 009 Liona Lai: Friday 9:45 am to 10:45am ATK 212; Alla Volodina: by appointment adms3585@yorku.ca Calendar Description This course, in conjunction with AP/ADMS 3595 3.00, develops thorough knowledge and understanding of generally accepted accounting principles and financial statement analytical skills by examining various technical areas of financial accounting. Prerequisite: AP/ADMS 2500 3.00. Prior to Fall 2009 Prerequisite: AK/ADMS 2500 3.0. Course credit exclusion: AK/ADMS 3585 3.00. Learning Outcomes After completion of the course, apart from mastering the technical knowledge of the revenue and asset side of the financial statements, students should also 1. Understand the importance of ethics in the accounting profession and realize potential conflicts of interest that one may encounter in the profession. 2. Begin to learn how to see the inter-relationship between accounting issues, analyse them, and integrate the findings to draw reasonable conclusions. 3. Begin to learn the basics of case writing and communicate effectively. 4. Understand the importance of teamwork and learn how to develop work plans and resolve conflicts. Textbook Required Intermediate Accounting, 10th Canadian Edition, Volume...
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... | COST ACCOUNTING AREA: CONTROL IMBA NUMBER OF SESSIONS: 20 PROFESSOR: SALVADOR CARMONA □ Ph.D (Accounting). Universidad de Sevilla. □ Last version, November 2006 COURSE DESCRIPTION A cost accounting system collects and classifies costs and assigns them to cost objects. The goal of a cost accounting system is to measure the cost of designing, developing, producing (or purchasing), selling, distributing, and servicing particular products or services. Cost allocation is at the heart of most accounting systems. Cost behavior -how the activities of an organization affect its costs- is also fundamental to cost accounting systems. The data provided by a cost accounting system is used for various purposes, which include product costing, planning and control, and decision making. This course mainly focuses on the first of these objectives -products costing. COURSE GOALS Students, as future managers, will utilize, at a minimum, the output of cost systems, which are the primary internal information systems in a firm. Students taking this course will gain an understanding of cost accounting systems, which includes a familiarization with: The goals of cost accounting systems; the fundamental features and design of cost accounting systems; and the various uses of the data provided by cost accounting decisions. A sound understanding of these issues is necessary to interpret cost accounting system outputs; to transform them from...
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...BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY School of Management Fall 2011 Class: Mgmt 501 Accounting for Managers Mondays: 4:25 – 5:50 pm LN 2403 Wednesdays: 4:25- 5:50 pm SL206 Instructor: Anna M. Addonisio, CPA, MBA Email: aaddonis@binghamton.edu Phone: 777-4941 Office: Library North Room 2430 Office Hours: by appointment Text: Financial and Managerial Accounting, by Needles, Powers, & Crosson, 9e edition, Houghton Mifflin Co. (required) Cases: Harvard Business School Cases (required) Wall Street Journal (recommended) Financial Calculator: Texas Instruments BAII Plus is required Course Objective: This course integrates financial accounting and managerial accounting. The objective is to provide students with an understanding of accounting information from the managers’ perspective and develop students’ ability and analytical skills necessary to use accounting information to make decisions in the business world. The first part of this course introduces financial accounting with the emphasis on financial statement preparation by accountants, selection of reporting strategies by managers, and interpretations by users of corporate financial reports. The second part of this course introduces managerial accounting, which is primarily concerned with data gathering and presentation for purpose of internal management evaluation and decision-making. The objective is to understand the determination of cost structure and develop techniques for evaluating alternative courses of...
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...Chapter 13 1. A corporation issued shares of its $10 par value common stock in exchange for land that has a market value of $84,000. The entry to record this transaction would include: A credit to paid- in Capital in excess of par value, common stock for $24,000. 2. A corporation issued 300 shares of its $5 par value common stock in payment of a $1,800 charge from its accountant for assistance in filing its charger with the state. The entry to record this transaction will include: A $300 credit to paid-in capital in excess for par value, common stock. 3. A company issued 60 shares of $100 par value stock for $7,000 cash. The total amount of paid-in capital is: $1,000 4. A corporation issued 5000 shares of $10 par value common stock in exchange for some land with a market value of $60,000. The entry to record this exchange is: Debit land $60,000; credit common stock $50,000; credit paid-in capital in excess of par value, common stock $10,000. 5. A premium on common stock: is the amount paid in excess of par by purchasers of newly issued stock 6. The date the directors vote to pay a dividend is called the: date of declaration 7. A liquidating dividend is : A return of a portion of the capital contributed by stockholders 8. A liability for dividends exists: on the date of declaration 9. A company’s board of directors votes to declare a cash dividend of $.75 per share. The company has 15,000 shares authorized, 10,000 issued, and 9,500 shares...
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...ACCOUNTING THEORY (FAR 600) Teaching and Learning Arrangements (SEMESTER: SEPT 2013 – JAN. 2014) COURSE CODE : FAR 600 PROGRAM : BACHELOR OF ACCOUNTING (HONS) CREDIT HOURS : 3 CONTACT HOURS : 3 STATUS : CORE TEACHING LECTURER : Prof Dr Rohana Othman OFFICE & PHONE NO. : Room 419 (Off. Tel: 03-55444987) E-MAIL : rohana799@gmail.com SYNOPSIS This course is designed to further enhance the students’ understanding of the concepts and issues in accounting theory and practices. The course involves the study of the practical and theoretical issues involved in the development, implementation and changes in conceptual framework and regulatory framework. COURSE OUTCOME At the end of the course, students should be able to: 1. Discuss the various theories and paradigms in accounting. 2. Demonstrate an understanding on the concept of Islamic Accounting, the need for it and its differences to conventional accounting. 3. Evaluate the evolution of the conceptual framework and standard setting process, nationally and internationally. 4. Evaluate the relationship between accounting theories and framework to the practice in the real world. 5. Analyze the recognition, measurement and other current issues in financial reporting. COURSE OUTLINE |Week |Topic |Contact Hours |Learning...
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...School of Administrative Studies Faculty of Liberal & Professional Studies York University Winter 2015 Course Outline AP/ADMS 3585 3.0 Intermediate Accounting I Course Director : | Alla Volodina | | Section : | M | | Course website: | | | Date/Time: | Wednesday 7:00 pm to 10 pm | | Location : | ACE 009 | | Instructor Office Hours: | By appointment | E-Mail Address : | adms3585@yorku.ca | Calendar Description This course, in conjunction with AP/ADMS 3595 3.00, develops thorough knowledge and understanding of generally accepted accounting principles and financial statement analytical skills by examining various technical areas of financial accounting. Prerequisite: AP/ADMS 2500 3.00. Prior to Fall 2009 Prerequisite: AK/ADMS 2500 3.0. Course credit exclusion: AK/ADMS 3585 3.00. Learning Outcomes After completion of the course, apart from mastering the technical knowledge of the revenue and asset side of the financial statements, students should also 1. Understand the importance of ethics in the accounting profession and realize potential conflicts of interest that one may encounter in the profession. 2. Begin to learn how to see the inter-relationship between accounting issues, analyse them, and integrate the findings to draw reasonable conclusions. 3. Begin to learn the basics of case writing and communicate effectively. 4. Understand the importance of teamwork and learn how to develop work plans and resolve conflicts. The...
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