Answer:
lack of parental care and training
Hope that helps!
Answer:
1.- Without Retrospective effect
2.- No as it comes from a change in estimations not an accounting error.
3.- yes. It will give a full explanation about the reasons to extend the useful life.
4.- Depreciation expense for 2021: 60,000
Explanation:
1.- The change in the useful life does not represent an accounting error. It comes from the estimation process.
800,000 - 160,000 x 2 = 480,000 book value at beginning 2021
480,000 / 8 new useful life = 60,000 depreciation per year.
Answer: $403.20
Explanation:We use a mortgage calculator to calculate the interest paid in the final payment. Since each repayment is made at the end of year, the repayments are annual payments. So, the calculator should have an annual amortization schedule to solve the problem.
I used
http://www.calculator.net/loan-calculator for the calculation because it has an annual payment schedule. Then, I went under the subtitle
Paying Back a Fixed Amount Periodically because the payments are equal. In that online calculator, I just input these data:
- Loan Amount: $12,000
- Loan Term: 4 (Loan term is number of years to pay the loan)
- Interest Rate: 11.5%
- Compound: Annually (APY)
- Pay Back: Every year
Then, I clicked the
calculate button and view amortization table. The annual amortization schedule is attached in this answer.
To determine the interest paid at the final payment, I looked at payment #4 because the final payment is at the 4th year. (The loan is paid in 4 annual payments).
As seen in the attached image, the interest paid in payment #4 is $403.20. Hence, the interest paid in the final payment is
$403.20.
Answer:
the journal entry to record warranty expense is:
Dr Warranty expense 30,000
Cr Warranty liability 30,000
the journal entry to record actual expenses related to product warranties:
Dr Warranty liability 10,000
Cr Cash (or inventory, or wages payable) 10,000
Depending on what type of costs are incurred by the company, the account credited will vary, e.g. if units are replaced, then inventory must be credited, or if units are repaired and only labor is used, then wages payable or cash should be credited. Since the question doesn't give us a lot of details, I credited cash.
Answer:
$353,800
Explanation:
Working Capital = Current Assets - Current Liabilities
where,
CA = $146000 + $189000 + $155000 + $94800 = $584,800
CL = $206000 + $25000 = $231,000
therefore,
Working Capital = $584,800 - $231,000 = $353,800