100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
SOLUTION MANUAL FOR Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting, The Financial Chapters, 8th edition By Tracie Miller Nobles, Brenda Mattison $17.49   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

SOLUTION MANUAL FOR Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting, The Financial Chapters, 8th edition By Tracie Miller Nobles, Brenda Mattison

 9 views  0 purchase
  • Course
  • Solution Manual
  • Institution
  • Solution Manual

SOLUTION MANUAL FOR Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting, The Financial Chapters, 8th edition By Tracie Miller Nobles, Brenda Mattison

Preview 4 out of 519  pages

  • October 10, 2024
  • 519
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
book image

Book Title:

Author(s):

  • Edition:
  • ISBN:
  • Edition:
  • Solution Manual
  • Solution Manual
avatar-seller
solutions
SOLUTION MANUAL FOR
Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting, The Financial Chapters, 8th edition
By Tracie Miller Nobles, Brenda Mattison
With Appendix
Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant Responses toEnvironmental Stimuli**:Plant adaptations and responses toenvironmental factors:**Photoperiodism**: Flowering responses today length.**Tropisms**: Growth
responses tolight (phototropism), gravity (gravitropism), and touch (thigmotropism).**Plant Movements**: Nastic movements and responses toenvironmental cues.**Plant Adaptations toEnvironmental
Stress**:Adaptationsofplants toextreme environmental conditions:**Water Conservation**: Adaptationsindesert plants (e.g., succulence, CAM photosynthesis).**Cold and Heat Tolerance**: Adaptationsinpolar and desert
plants.**Salt Tolerance**: Adaptationsinhalophytes.**Summary and Key Concepts**:The chapter concludes withasummaryofkey concepts related toplant anatomy and growth, reinforcing understandingofplant structures,
functions, growth processes, and adaptations.Chapter 20 providesacomprehensive explorationofplant anatomy and growth, highlighting thestructural diversity, physiological adaptations, and growth mechanisms that enable
plants tothriveindiverse environments. It prepares students forfurther exploration into plant physiology, ecology, and agriculture coveredinsubsequent chaptersofthetextbook.If you have specific questions about anyofthese
topics or would like more detailed informationona particular aspectofChapter 20, feel free toask!Chapter 21Chapter 21of"EssentialsofBiology" by Sylvia Mader and Michael Windelspecht, titled "Plant Responses and
Reproduction," typically covers how plants respond toenvironmental stimuli and thevarious mechanismsofplant reproduction. Here’s an overviewofwhat you might findinthis chapter:**Plant Responses toEnvironmental
Stimuli**:**Photoperiodism**: Plant responses today length, influencing flowering and other developmental processes.**Tropisms**: Directional growth responses toenvironmental stimuli:**Phototropism**: Growth
towards or away from light.**Gravitropism**: Growth response togravity.**Thigmotropism**: Growth response totouch.**Plant Movements**: Nastic movementsinresponse toenvironmental cues (e.g., leaf
movementsinMimosa pudica).**Plant Reproduction**:**Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)**:**Flower Structure**: Partsoftheflower (sepals, petals, stamens, carpels).**Pollination**: Transferofpollen from anther
tostigma.**Fertilization**: Fusionofmale gamete (pollen) with female gamete (egg) toformazygote.**Seed Development**: Formationofseed from fertilized ovule.**Fruit Formation**: Developmentoffruit from mature
ovary.**Seed Dispersal**: Mechanisms fordispersing seeds away from theparent plant (e.g., wind, water, animals).**Asexual ReproductioninPlants**:**Vegetative Propagation**: Asexual reproduction through plant parts
(e.g., runners, bulbs, tubers).**Cloning**: Artificial methodsofasexual propagation (e.g., cuttings, tissue culture).**Plant Hormones and Growth Regulation**:**Auxins**: Roleinapical dominance, phototropism, and root
growth.**Gibberellins**: Stem elongation and seed germination.**Cytokinins**: Cell division and lateral bud growth.**Ethylene**: Fruit ripening and senescence.**Abscisic Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant
Responses toStress**: Hormonal and physiological responses toenvironmental stresses (e.g., drought, salinity).**Plant Life Cycles and AlternationofGenerations**:**AlternationofGenerations**: Alternating between haploid
(gametophyte) and diploid (sporophyte) generationsinplant life cycles.**Bryophytes**: Life cycleofmosses and liverworts.**Ferns and Seed Plants**: Life cycleofferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.**Reproductive
StrategiesinNon-Flowering Plants**:**Seedless Plants**: Reproductioninferns and other seedless vascular plants.**Gymnosperms**: Life cycleofconifers and other gymnosperms.**Human ImpactonPlant
Reproduction**:**Agricultural Practices**: Useofhormones and techniques forenhancing plant reproduction and yield.**Pollination Crisis**: Factors affecting


Chapter F:1
Accounting and the Business Environment
Review Questions
1. What is accounting?

Accounting is the information system that measures business activities, processes the information
into reports, and communicates the results to decision makers. Accounting is the language of
business.

2. Briefly describe the two major fields of accounting.

Financial accounting provides information for external decision makers, such as outside investors,
lenders, customers, and the federal government. Managerial accounting focuses on information for
internal decision makers, such as the company’s managers and employees.

3. Describe the various types of individuals who use accounting information and how they use that
information to make important decisions.

Individuals use accounting information to help them manage their money, evaluate a new job, and
better decide whether they can afford to make a new purchase. Business owners use accounting
information to set goals, measure progress toward those goals, and make adjustments when needed.
Investors use accounting information to help them decide whether or not a company is a good
investment and once they have invested, they use a company’s financial statements to analyze how
their investment is performing. Creditors use accounting information to decide whether to lend
money to a business and to evaluate a company’s ability to make the loan payments. Taxing
authorities use accounting information to calculate the amount of income tax that a company has to
pay.

4. What are various certifications available for accountants? Briefly explain each certification.

Certified Public Accountants (CPAs) are licensed professional accountants who serve the general
1-1

, public. They work for public accounting firms, businesses, government, or educational institutions.
A Chartered Global Management Accountant (CGMA) is an accountant who has advanced
knowledge in finance, operations, strategy, and management. Certified Management Accountants
(CMAs) specialize in accounting and financial management knowledge. They work for a single
company. Certified Financial Planners (CFPs) work with individuals to help them budget, plan for
retirement, save for education, and manage their finances.

5. What is the role of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)?
The FASB oversees the creation and governance of accounting standards. They work with
governmental regulatory agencies, congressionally created groups, and private groups.

6. Explain the purpose of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), including the
organization currently responsible for the creation and governance of these standards in the United
States.
Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant Responses toEnvironmental Stimuli**:Plant adaptations and responses toenvironmental factors:**Photoperiodism**: Flowering responses today length.**Tropisms**: Growth
responses tolight (phototropism), gravity (gravitropism), and touch (thigmotropism).**Plant Movements**: Nastic movements and responses toenvironmental cues.**Plant Adaptations toEnvironmental
Stress**:Adaptationsofplants toextreme environmental conditions:**Water Conservation**: Adaptationsindesert plants (e.g., succulence, CAM photosynthesis).**Cold and Heat Tolerance**: Adaptationsinpolar and desert
plants.**Salt Tolerance**: Adaptationsinhalophytes.**Summary and Key Concepts**:The chapter concludes withasummaryofkey concepts related toplant anatomy and growth, reinforcing understandingofplant structures,
functions, growth processes, and adaptations.Chapter 20 providesacomprehensive explorationofplant anatomy and growth, highlighting thestructural diversity, physiological adaptations, and growth mechanisms that enable
plants tothriveindiverse environments. It prepares students forfurther exploration into plant physiology, ecology, and agriculture coveredinsubsequent chaptersofthetextbook.If you have specific questions about anyofthese
topics or would like more detailed informationona particular aspectofChapter 20, feel free toask!Chapter 21Chapter 21of"EssentialsofBiology" by Sylvia Mader and Michael Windelspecht, titled "Plant Responses and
Reproduction," typically covers how plants respond toenvironmental stimuli and thevarious mechanismsofplant reproduction. Here’s an overviewofwhat you might findinthis chapter:**Plant Responses toEnvironmental
Stimuli**:**Photoperiodism**: Plant responses today length, influencing flowering and other developmental processes.**Tropisms**: Directional growth responses toenvironmental stimuli:**Phototropism**: Growth
towards or away from light.**Gravitropism**: Growth response togravity.**Thigmotropism**: Growth response totouch.**Plant Movements**: Nastic movementsinresponse toenvironmental cues (e.g., leaf
movementsinMimosa pudica).**Plant Reproduction**:**Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)**:**Flower Structure**: Partsoftheflower (sepals, petals, stamens, carpels).**Pollination**: Transferofpollen from anther
tostigma.**Fertilization**: Fusionofmale gamete (pollen) with female gamete (egg) toformazygote.**Seed Development**: Formationofseed from fertilized ovule.**Fruit Formation**: Developmentoffruit from mature
ovary.**Seed Dispersal**: Mechanisms fordispersing seeds away from theparent plant (e.g., wind, water, animals).**Asexual ReproductioninPlants**:**Vegetative Propagation**: Asexual reproduction through plant parts
(e.g., runners, bulbs, tubers).**Cloning**: Artificial methodsofasexual propagation (e.g., cuttings, tissue culture).**Plant Hormones and Growth Regulation**:**Auxins**: Roleinapical dominance, phototropism, and root
growth.**Gibberellins**: Stem elongation and seed germination.**Cytokinins**: Cell division and lateral bud growth.**Ethylene**: Fruit ripening and senescence.**Abscisic Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant
Responses toStress**: Hormonal and physiological responses toenvironmental stresses (e.g., drought, salinity).**Plant Life Cycles and AlternationofGenerations**:**AlternationofGenerations**: Alternating between haploid
(gametophyte) and diploid (sporophyte) generationsinplant life cycles.**Bryophytes**: Life cycleofmosses and liverworts.**Ferns and Seed Plants**: Life cycleofferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.**Reproductive
StrategiesinNon-Flowering Plants**:**Seedless Plants**: Reproductioninferns and other seedless vascular plants.**Gymnosperms**: Life cycleofconifers and other gymnosperms.**Human ImpactonPlant
Reproduction**:**Agricultural Practices**: Useofhormones and techniques forenhancing plant reproduction and yield.**Pollination Crisis**: Factors affecting

The guidelines for accounting information are called GAAP. It is the main U.S. accounting rule
book and is currently created and governed by the FASB. Investors and lenders must have
information that is relevant and has faithful representation in order to make decisions and GAAP
provides the framework for this financial reporting.

7. Describe the similarities and differences among the four different types of business entities discussed
in the chapter.

A sole proprietorship has a single owner, terminates upon the owner’s death or choice, the owner has
personal liability for the business’s debts, and it is not a separate tax entity. A partnership has two or
more owners, terminates at partner’s choice or death, the partners have personal liability, and it is
not a separate tax entity. A corporation is a separate legal entity, has one or more owners, has
indefinite life, the stockholders are not personally liable for the business’s debts, and it is a separate
tax entity. A limited-liability company has one or more members and each is only liable for his or her
own actions, has an indefinite life, and is not a separate tax entity.

8. A business purchases an acre of land for $5,000. The current market value is $5,550, and the land
was assessed for property tax purposes at $5,250. What value should the land be recorded at, and
which accounting principle supports your answer?

The land should be recorded at $5,000. The cost principle states that assets should be recorded at
their historical cost.

9. What does the going concern assumption mean for a business?

1-2

, The going concern assumption assumes that the entity will remain in business for the foreseeable
future and long enough to use existing resources for their intended purpose.

10. Which concept states that accounting information should be complete, neutral, and free from
material error?

The faithful representation concept states that accounting information should be complete, neutral,
and free from material error.

11. Financial statements in the United States are reported in U.S. dollars. What assumption supports this
statement?

The monetary unit assumption states that items on the financial statements should be measured in
terms of a monetary unit.
Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant Responses toEnvironmental Stimuli**:Plant adaptations and responses toenvironmental factors:**Photoperiodism**: Flowering responses today length.**Tropisms**: Growth
responses tolight (phototropism), gravity (gravitropism), and touch (thigmotropism).**Plant Movements**: Nastic movements and responses toenvironmental cues.**Plant Adaptations toEnvironmental
Stress**:Adaptationsofplants toextreme environmental conditions:**Water Conservation**: Adaptationsindesert plants (e.g., succulence, CAM photosynthesis).**Cold and Heat Tolerance**: Adaptationsinpolar and desert
plants.**Salt Tolerance**: Adaptationsinhalophytes.**Summary and Key Concepts**:The chapter concludes withasummaryofkey concepts related toplant anatomy and growth, reinforcing understandingofplant structures,
functions, growth processes, and adaptations.Chapter 20 providesacomprehensive explorationofplant anatomy and growth, highlighting thestructural diversity, physiological adaptations, and growth mechanisms that enable
plants tothriveindiverse environments. It prepares students forfurther exploration into plant physiology, ecology, and agriculture coveredinsubsequent chaptersofthetextbook.If you have specific questions about anyofthese
topics or would like more detailed informationona particular aspectofChapter 20, feel free toask!Chapter 21Chapter 21of"EssentialsofBiology" by Sylvia Mader and Michael Windelspecht, titled "Plant Responses and
Reproduction," typically covers how plants respond toenvironmental stimuli and thevarious mechanismsofplant reproduction. Here’s an overviewofwhat you might findinthis chapter:**Plant Responses toEnvironmental
Stimuli**:**Photoperiodism**: Plant responses today length, influencing flowering and other developmental processes.**Tropisms**: Directional growth responses toenvironmental stimuli:**Phototropism**: Growth
towards or away from light.**Gravitropism**: Growth response togravity.**Thigmotropism**: Growth response totouch.**Plant Movements**: Nastic movementsinresponse toenvironmental cues (e.g., leaf
movementsinMimosa pudica).**Plant Reproduction**:**Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)**:**Flower Structure**: Partsoftheflower (sepals, petals, stamens, carpels).**Pollination**: Transferofpollen from anther
tostigma.**Fertilization**: Fusionofmale gamete (pollen) with female gamete (egg) toformazygote.**Seed Development**: Formationofseed from fertilized ovule.**Fruit Formation**: Developmentoffruit from mature
ovary.**Seed Dispersal**: Mechanisms fordispersing seeds away from theparent plant (e.g., wind, water, animals).**Asexual ReproductioninPlants**:**Vegetative Propagation**: Asexual reproduction through plant parts
(e.g., runners, bulbs, tubers).**Cloning**: Artificial methodsofasexual propagation (e.g., cuttings, tissue culture).**Plant Hormones and Growth Regulation**:**Auxins**: Roleinapical dominance, phototropism, and root
growth.**Gibberellins**: Stem elongation and seed germination.**Cytokinins**: Cell division and lateral bud growth.**Ethylene**: Fruit ripening and senescence.**Abscisic Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant
Responses toStress**: Hormonal and physiological responses toenvironmental stresses (e.g., drought, salinity).**Plant Life Cycles and AlternationofGenerations**:**AlternationofGenerations**: Alternating between haploid
(gametophyte) and diploid (sporophyte) generationsinplant life cycles.**Bryophytes**: Life cycleofmosses and liverworts.**Ferns and Seed Plants**: Life cycleofferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.**Reproductive
StrategiesinNon-Flowering Plants**:**Seedless Plants**: Reproductioninferns and other seedless vascular plants.**Gymnosperms**: Life cycleofconifers and other gymnosperms.**Human ImpactonPlant
Reproduction**:**Agricultural Practices**: Useofhormones and techniques forenhancing plant reproduction and yield.**Pollination Crisis**: Factors affecting

12. Explain the role of the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) in relation to International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
The IASB is the organization that develops and creates IFRS which are a set of global accounting
standards that would be used around the world.

13. What is the accounting equation? Briefly explain each of the three parts.

Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Assets are economic resources that are expected to benefit the business
in the future. They are things of value that a business owns or has control of. Liabilities are debts that
are owed to creditors. They are one source of claims against assets. Equity is the other source of
claims against assets. Equity is the stockholders’ claims against assets and is the amount of assets that
is left over after the company has paid its liabilities. It represents the net worth of the corporation.

14. How does retained earnings increase? What are the two ways that retained earnings decreases?

Retained earnings increases with revenues. Retained earnings decreases with expenses and
dividends.

15. How is net income calculated? Define revenues and expenses.

Revenues – Expenses = Net Income. Revenues are earnings resulting from delivering goods or
services to customers. Expenses are the cost of selling goods or service.


1-3

, 16. What are the steps used when analyzing a business transaction?

Step 1: Identify the accounts and the account type. Step 2: Decide if each account increases or
decreases. Step 3: Determine if the accounting equation is in balance.

17. List the financial statements discussed in the chapter and briefly describe each statement.

Income Statement – Shows the difference between an entity’s revenues and expenses and reports the
net income or net loss for a specific period.
Statement of Retained Earnings – Shows the changes in retained earnings for a specific period
including net income (loss) and dividends. For public companies, the statement of retained earnings is
often included in a statement of stockholders’ equity.
Balance Sheet – Shows the assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity of the business as of a specific
date.
Statement of Cash Flows – Shows a business’s cash receipts and cash payments for a specific period.
Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant Responses toEnvironmental Stimuli**:Plant adaptations and responses toenvironmental factors:**Photoperiodism**: Flowering responses today length.**Tropisms**: Growth
responses tolight (phototropism), gravity (gravitropism), and touch (thigmotropism).**Plant Movements**: Nastic movements and responses toenvironmental cues.**Plant Adaptations toEnvironmental
Stress**:Adaptationsofplants toextreme environmental conditions:**Water Conservation**: Adaptationsindesert plants (e.g., succulence, CAM photosynthesis).**Cold and Heat Tolerance**: Adaptationsinpolar and desert
plants.**Salt Tolerance**: Adaptationsinhalophytes.**Summary and Key Concepts**:The chapter concludes withasummaryofkey concepts related toplant anatomy and growth, reinforcing understandingofplant structures,
functions, growth processes, and adaptations.Chapter 20 providesacomprehensive explorationofplant anatomy and growth, highlighting thestructural diversity, physiological adaptations, and growth mechanisms that enable
plants tothriveindiverse environments. It prepares students forfurther exploration into plant physiology, ecology, and agriculture coveredinsubsequent chaptersofthetextbook.If you have specific questions about anyofthese
topics or would like more detailed informationona particular aspectofChapter 20, feel free toask!Chapter 21Chapter 21of"EssentialsofBiology" by Sylvia Mader and Michael Windelspecht, titled "Plant Responses and
Reproduction," typically covers how plants respond toenvironmental stimuli and thevarious mechanismsofplant reproduction. Here’s an overviewofwhat you might findinthis chapter:**Plant Responses toEnvironmental
Stimuli**:**Photoperiodism**: Plant responses today length, influencing flowering and other developmental processes.**Tropisms**: Directional growth responses toenvironmental stimuli:**Phototropism**: Growth
towards or away from light.**Gravitropism**: Growth response togravity.**Thigmotropism**: Growth response totouch.**Plant Movements**: Nastic movementsinresponse toenvironmental cues (e.g., leaf
movementsinMimosa pudica).**Plant Reproduction**:**Flowering Plants (Angiosperms)**:**Flower Structure**: Partsoftheflower (sepals, petals, stamens, carpels).**Pollination**: Transferofpollen from anther
tostigma.**Fertilization**: Fusionofmale gamete (pollen) with female gamete (egg) toformazygote.**Seed Development**: Formationofseed from fertilized ovule.**Fruit Formation**: Developmentoffruit from mature
ovary.**Seed Dispersal**: Mechanisms fordispersing seeds away from theparent plant (e.g., wind, water, animals).**Asexual ReproductioninPlants**:**Vegetative Propagation**: Asexual reproduction through plant parts
(e.g., runners, bulbs, tubers).**Cloning**: Artificial methodsofasexual propagation (e.g., cuttings, tissue culture).**Plant Hormones and Growth Regulation**:**Auxins**: Roleinapical dominance, phototropism, and root
growth.**Gibberellins**: Stem elongation and seed germination.**Cytokinins**: Cell division and lateral bud growth.**Ethylene**: Fruit ripening and senescence.**Abscisic Acid**: Dormancy and stress responses.**Plant
Responses toStress**: Hormonal and physiological responses toenvironmental stresses (e.g., drought, salinity).**Plant Life Cycles and AlternationofGenerations**:**AlternationofGenerations**: Alternating between haploid
(gametophyte) and diploid (sporophyte) generationsinplant life cycles.**Bryophytes**: Life cycleofmosses and liverworts.**Ferns and Seed Plants**: Life cycleofferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.**Reproductive
StrategiesinNon-Flowering Plants**:**Seedless Plants**: Reproductioninferns and other seedless vascular plants.**Gymnosperms**: Life cycleofconifers and other gymnosperms.**Human ImpactonPlant
Reproduction**:**Agricultural Practices**: Useofhormones and techniques forenhancing plant reproduction and yield.**Pollination Crisis**: Factors affecting

18. What is the calculation for ROA? Explain what ROA measures.

Return on Assets = Net income / Average total assets. ROA measures how profitably a company
uses its assets.
Short Exercises
S-F:1-1
Identifying users of accounting information
For each user of accounting information, identify if the user would use financial accounting or
managerial accounting.
a. investor
b. banker
c. IRS
d. manager of the business
e. controller
f. stockholder
g. human resources director
h. creditor

a. FA e. MA
b. FA f. FA
c. FA g. MA
d. MA h. FA
1-4

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller solutions. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $17.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

67866 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$17.49
  • (0)
  Add to cart