Answer:
1. T-accounts:
Accounts Debit Credit
Accounts Receivable
Balance $4,200
Service Revenue 8,400
Cash 10,200
Accounts Debit Credit
Service Revenue
Accounts Receivable 8,400
Accounts Debit Credit
Supplies
Balance $400
Accounts Payable 2,300
Balance c/d $2,700
Accounts Debit Credit
Accounts Payable
Balance $3,500
Supplies 2,300
Cash $3,700
Balance c/d $2,100
Accounts Debit Credit
Cash Account
Balance $3,400
Accounts Receivable 10,200
Advertising $1,000
Accounts Payable 3,700
Deferred Revenue 1,100
Balance c/d $10,000
Accounts Debit Credit
Advertising Expense
Cash 1,000
Accounts Debit Credit
Accounts Payable
Cash 3,700
Accounts Debit Credit
Deferred Revenue
Balance $300
Cash 1,100
Balance c/d $1,400
Explanation:
a) Data:
General Entries:
Accounts Debit Credit
1. Accounts Receivable 8,400
Service Revenue 8,400
2. Supplies 2,300
Accounts Payable 2,300
3. Cash 10,200
Accounts Receivable 10,200
4. Advertising Expense 1,000
Cash 1,000
5. Accounts Payable 3,700
Cash 3,700
6. Cash 1,100
Deferred Revenue 1,100
b) The beginning balance of each account before the transactions is:
Cash, $3,400
Accounts Receivable, $4,200
Supplies, $400
Accounts Payable, $3,500
Deferred Revenue, $300
Answer:
1. Repainted the office building: This should be capitalized.
2. Added a new wing onto the office building: This should be capitalized.
3. Took their fleet of cars in for servicing (changing the oil, etc.).: This should be expensed.
5. Had an engine rebuilt in one of their fleet cars: This should be capitalized.
4. Added newer electronic locks on the doors in the production building: This should be expensed.
Explanation:
1. Repainted the office building: This should be capitalized. This is because repainting is a repair that will restore the physical structure of the office building and significantly improve it. Since it is a capital improvement cost, it should be capitalized and depreciated like other fixed assets.
2. Added a new wing onto the office building: This should be capitalized and depreciated like other fixed assets since it is a capital expenditure that significantly added to the structure of the office building.
3. Took their fleet of cars in for servicing (changing the oil, etc.).: This falls under repair and should be expensed.
4. Added newer electronic locks on the doors in the production building: This should be expensed. Cost of locks and keys are ordinary expenses that do not improve the physical structure of the production building.
5. Had an engine rebuilt in one of their fleet cars: This should be capitalized. It is a tangible improvement to the fleets of cars and this kind of costs fall under capital expenditures.
Answer: Variable ... Fixed
Explanation:
In the short run, Variable Inputs or costs are known as those which can be changed and their quantities can be varied. In this scenario, the employees that Cho's uses can be varied and so are the Variable Inputs.
Similarly, those costs that cann ot be changed or varied in the short run are rightly known as Fixed Inputs. Cho's Kitchen cannot take more than 3 ovens and also she has already signed a lease for them. These costs cannot be changed and so make the oven a Fixed Input.
It is worthy of note that in the long term, all Costs are considered Variable.
Answer:
$24,220
Explanation:
After tax cashflow formula as follows;
AT cashflow = Income before taxes(1- tax) + annual depreciation amount
Depreciation amount is added back because even though it is an expense deducted to arrive at the income before tax, it is not an actual cash outflow.
Annual depreciation amount = $200,000/ 20 = $10,000
AT cashflow = 18,000*(1-0.21) + 10,000
= 14,220 + 10,000
= 24,220
Therefore, Mariposa’s expected cash flow after taxes per year is $24,220
The unearned consulting revenues are liabilities. A liability, in accounting terms, is an obligation and is found in the balance sheets of companies or businesses. When a company does transactions with other individuals or companies usually they owe amounts to creditors for the goods or services the company acquires. In another sense, a liability is a source of the company’s assets. They can also be considered as claims against the company’s assets. A liability may also include those amounts received by the company in advance of future services. Liabilities include accounts payable, notes payable, salaries payable, interest payable, bonds payable, accrued expenses payable, etc. Their normal balance is credit.