Solution:
Instructions Journalize the April transactions:
Date Account Titles and Explanation
4/30 Work in Process—Cooking
Work in Process—Canning
Raw Materials Inventory
4/30 Work in Process—Cooking
Work in Process—Canning
Factory Labor
4/30 Work in Process—Cooking
Work in Process—Canning
Manufacturing Overhead
4/30 Work in Process—Canning
Work in Process—Cooking
Cooking and out the debits
Debit Credit
22,800
10,900 33,700
9,400
7,230 16,630
33,800
28,100 61,900
55,900
55,900
The answer is settling on morally revise business choices.
They help you find unbiased information about the product’s actual performance.
Convenience sampling is used, because the population is taken from a sample that easy to reach
Answer:
USING 0% DISCOUNT RATE
PROJECT E
Year Cashflow [email protected]% PV
$ $
0 (23,000) 1 (23,000)
1 5,000 1 5,000
2 6000 1 6,000
3 7000 1 7,000
4 10,000 1 10,000
NPV 5,000
PROJECT H
Year Cashflow [email protected]% PV
$ $
0 (25,000) 1 (23,000)
1 16,000 1 16,000
2 5,000 1 5,000
3 4,000 1 4,000
NPV 2,000
Project A should be accepted
USING 9% DISCOUNT RATE
Year Cashflow [email protected]% PV
$ $
0 (23,000) 1 (23,000)
1 5,000 0.9174 4,587
2 6000 0.8462 5,077
3 7000 0.7722 5,405
4 10,000 0.7084 7,084
NPV (847)
PROJECT H
Year Cashflow [email protected]% PV
$ $
0 (25,000) 1 (23,000)
1 16,000 0.9714 15,542
2 5,000 0.8462 4,231
3 4,000 0.7722 3,089
NPV (138)
None of the projects should be accepted because they have negative NPV
Explanation:
The question requires the computation of NPV using 0% and 9%.
The cashflows of the two projects will be discounted at 0% and 9%.
The discount factors for each project can be calculated using the formula (1+r)-n. The cashflows of the projects will be multiplied by the discount factors to obtain the present values. NPV is the difference between present values of cash inflows and initial outlay.