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Solution Manual for Fundamental Accounting Principles 24th Edition By Wild $15.49   Add to cart

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Solution Manual for Fundamental Accounting Principles 24th Edition By Wild

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Solution Manual for Fundamental Accounting Principles 24th Edition By Wild

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  • February 22, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Wild and Shaw, FAP 24e Solutions Manual: Chapter 1




Chapter 1
Accounting in Business

QUESTIONS
1. The purpose of accounting is to provide decision makers with relevant and reliable
information to help them make better decisions. Examples include information for
people making investments, loans, and business plans.
2. Technology reduces the time, effort, and cost of recordkeeping. There is still a
demand for people who can design accounting systems, supervise their operation,
analyze complex transactions, and interpret reports. Demand also exists for people
who can effectively use computers to prepare and analyze accounting reports.
Technology will never substitute for qualified people with abilities to prepare, use,
analyze, and interpret accounting information.
3. External users and their uses of accounting information include: (a) lenders, to
measure the risk and return of loans; (b) shareholders, to assess whether to buy,
sell, or hold their shares; (c) directors, to oversee the organization; (d) employees
and labor unions, to judge the fairness of wages and assess future employment
opportunities; and (e) regulators, to determine whether the organization is
complying with regulations. Other users are voters, legislators, government officials,
contributors to nonprofits, suppliers, and customers.
4. Business owners and managers use accounting information to help answer
questions such as: What resources does an organization own? What debts are
owed? How much income is earned? Are expenses reasonable for the level of
sales? Are customers’ accounts being promptly collected?
5. Service businesses include: Standard and Poor’s, Dun & Bradstreet, Merrill Lynch,
Southwest Airlines, CitiCorp, Humana, Charles Schwab, and Prudential. Businesses
offering products include Nike, Reebok, Gap, Apple, Ford Motor Co., Philip Morris,
Coca-Cola, Best Buy, and WalMart.
6. The internal role of accounting is to serve the organization’s internal operating
functions. It does this by providing useful information for internal users in
completing their tasks more effectively and efficiently. By providing this information,
accounting helps the organization reach its overall goals.
7. Accounting professionals offer many services including auditing, management
advice, tax planning, business valuation, and money management.
8. Marketing managers are likely interested in information such as sales volume,
advertising costs, promotion costs, salaries of sales personnel, and sales
commissions.




1
Copyright © 2019 by McGraw-Hill Education.
All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

, Wild and Shaw, FAP 24e Solutions Manual: Chapter 1



9. Accounting is described as a service activity because it serves decision makers by
providing information to help them make better business decisions.
10. Some accounting-related professions include consultant, financial analyst,
underwriter, financial planner, appraiser, FBI investigator, market researcher, and
system designer.
11. Ethics rules require that auditors avoid auditing clients in which they have a direct
investment, or if the auditor’s fee is dependent on the figures in the client’s reports.
This will help prevent others from doubting the quality of the auditor’s report.
12. In addition to preparing tax returns, tax accountants help companies and individuals
plan future transactions to minimize the amount of tax to be paid. They are also
actively involved in estate planning and in helping set up organizations. Some tax
accountants work for regulatory agencies such as the IRS or the various state
departments of revenue. These tax accountants help to enforce tax laws.
13. The objectivity concept means that financial statement information is supported by
independent, unbiased evidence other than someone’s opinion or imagination.
14. This treatment is justified by both the cost principle and the going-concern
assumption.
15. The revenue recognition principle provides guidance for managers and auditors so
they know when to recognize revenue. If revenue is recognized too early, the
business looks more profitable than it is. On the other hand, if revenue is
recognized too late the business looks less profitable than it is. This principle
demands that revenue be recognized when it is both earned (when service or
product is provided) and can be measured reliably. The amount of revenue should
equal the value of the assets received or expected to be received from the
business’s operating activities covering a specific time period.
16. Business organizations can be organized as a sole proprietorship, partnership,
corporation, or LLC. These forms have implications for legal entity and liability,
business life, taxation, and number of owners as follows.
Proprietorship Partnership Corporation LLC

Business entity yes yes yes yes
Legal entity no no yes yes
Limited liability no no yes yes
Unlimited life no no yes yes
Business Taxed no no yes no
One owner allowed yes no yes yes
17. (a) Assets are resources owned or controlled by a company that are expected to
yield future benefits. (b) Liabilities are creditors’ claims on assets that reflect
obligations to provide assets, products, or services to others. (c) Equity is the
owner’s claim on assets and is equal to assets minus liabilities. (d) Net assets refer
to equity.
18. Equity is increased by investments from the owner and by net income (which is the
excess of revenues over expenses). It is decreased by withdrawals by the owner
and by a net loss (which is the excess of expenses over revenues).



2
Copyright © 2019 by McGraw-Hill Education.
All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

, Wild and Shaw, FAP 24e Solutions Manual: Chapter 1



19. Accounting principles consist of (a) general and (b) specific principles. General
principles are the basic assumptions, concepts, and guidelines for preparing
financial statements. They stem from long-used accounting practices. Specific
principles are detailed rules used in reporting on business transactions and events.
They usually arise from the rulings of authoritative and regulatory groups such as
the Financial Accounting Standards Board or the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
20. Revenue (or sales) is the amount received from selling products and services.
21. Net income (also called income, profit, or earnings) equals revenues minus
expenses (if revenues exceed expenses). Net income increases equity. If expenses
exceed revenues, the company has a net loss. Net loss decreases equity.
22. The four basic financial statements are: income statement, statement of owner’s
equity, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows.
23. An income statement reports a company’s revenues and expenses along with the
resulting net income or loss over a period of time.
24. Rent expense, utilities expense, administrative expenses, advertising and promotion
expenses, maintenance expense, and salaries and wages expenses are some
examples of business expenses.
25. The statement of owner’s equity explains the changes in equity from net income or
loss, and from any owner contributions and withdrawals over a period of time.
26. The balance sheet describes a company’s financial position (types and amounts of
assets, liabilities, and equity) at a point in time.
27. The statement of cash flows reports on the cash inflows and outflows from a
company’s operating, investing, and financing activities.
28. Return on assets, also called return on investment, is a profitability measure that is
useful in evaluating management, analyzing and forecasting profits, and planning
activities. It is computed as net income divided by the average total assets. For
example, if we have an average annual balance of $100 in a bank account and it
earns interest of $5 for the year, then our return on assets is $5 / $100 or 5%. The
return on assets is a popular measure for analysis because it allows us to compare
companies of different sizes and in different industries.
29A. Return refers to income, and risk is the uncertainty about the return we expect to
make. The lower the risk of an investment, the lower the expected return. For
example, savings accounts pay a low return because of the low risk of a bank not
returning the principal with interest. Higher risk implies higher, but riskier, expected
returns.
30B. Organizations carry out three major activities: financing, investing, and operating.
Financing provides the means used to pay for resources. Investing refers to the
acquisition and disposing of resources necessary to carry out the organization’s
plans. Operating activities are the actual carrying out of these plans. (Planning is the
glue that connects these activities, including the organization’s ideas, goals, and
strategies.)




3
Copyright © 2019 by McGraw-Hill Education.
All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

, Wild and Shaw, FAP 24e Solutions Manual: Chapter 1



31B. An organization’s financing activities (liabilities and equity) pay for investing
activities (assets). An organization cannot have more or less assets than its
liabilities and equity combined and, similarly, it cannot have more or less liabilities
and equity than its total assets. This means: assets = liabilities + equity. This
relation is called the accounting equation (also called the balance sheet equation),
and it applies to organizations at all times.
32. The dollar amounts in Google’s financial statements are rounded to the nearest
million ($1,000,000). Google’s consolidated statement of income (or income
statement) covers the calendar-year ended December 31, 2017. Google also reports
comparative income statements for the previous two years.
33. The independent auditor for Apple is Ernst & Young, LLP. The auditor expressly
states that “our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements
based on our audits.” The auditor also states that “these financial statements are
the responsibility of the Company’s management.”




4
Copyright © 2019 by McGraw-Hill Education.
All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

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