Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 2 2–1 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Question 2–1 External events involve an exchange transaction between the company and a separate economic entity. For every external transaction, the company is receiving something in exchange for something else. Internal events do not involve an exchange transaction but do affect the financial position of the company. Examples of external events are the purchase of inventory, a sale to a customer, and the borrowing of cash from a bank. Examples of internal events include the recording of depreciation expense, the expiration of prepaid rent, and the accrual of salary expense.Question 2–2 According to the accounting equation, there is equality between the total economic resources of an entity, its assets, and the claims to those resources, liabilities, and equity. This implies that, since resources must always equal claims, the net effect of any transaction cannot affect one side of the accounting equation differently than the other side.Question 2–3 The purpose of a journal is to capture, in chronological order, the dual effect of a transaction. A general ledger is a collection of storage areas called accounts. These accounts keep track of the increases and decreases in each element of financial position.Question 2–4 Permanent accounts represent the financial position of a company—assets, liabilities and owners' equity—at a particular point in time. Temporary accounts represent the changes in shareholders’ equity, the retained earnings component of equity for a corporation, caused by revenue, expense, gain, and loss transactions. It would be cumbersome to record revenue/expense, gain/loss transactions directly into the permanent retained earnings account. Recording these transactions in temporary accounts facilitates the preparation of the financial statements.Question 2–5 Assets are increased by debits and decreased by credits. Liabilities and equity accounts are increased by credits and decreased by debits.Chapter 2 Review of the Accounting Process
QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW OF KEY TOPICS
Intermediate Accounting 8th Edition Spiceland Solutions Manual Visit TestBankDeal.com to get complete for all chapters
2–2 Intermediate Accounting, 8/e Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.Answers to Questions (continued) Question 2–6 Revenues and gains are increased by credits and decreased by debits. Expenses and losses are increased by debits (thus causing owners’ equity to decrease) and decreased by credits (thus causing owners’ equity to increase).Question 2–7 The first step in the accounting processing cycle is to identify external transactions affecting the accounting equation. Source documents, such as sales invoices, bills from suppliers, and cash register tapes, help to identify the transactions and then provide the information necessary to process the transaction.Question 2–8 Transaction analysis is the process of reviewing the source documents to determine the dual effect on the accounting equation and the specific elements involved.Question 2–9 After transactions are recorded in a journal, the debits and credits must be transferred to the appropriate general ledger accounts. This transfer is called posting.Question 2–10 Transaction 1 records the purchase of $20,000 of inventory on account.Transaction 2 records a credit sale of $30,000 and the corresponding cost of goods sold of $18,000.Question 2–11 An unadjusted trial balance is a list of the general ledger accounts and their balances at a time before any end-of-period adjusting entries have been recorded. An adjusted trial balance is prepared after adjusting entries have been recorded and posted to the accounts.
Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 2 2–3 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.Answers to Questions (continued) Question 2–12 Adjusting entries record the effect on financial position of internal events, those that do not involve an exchange transaction with another entity. They must be recorded at the end of any period when financial statements are prepared to properly reflect financial position and results of operations according to the accrual accounting model.Question 2–13 Closing entries transfer the balances in the temporary owners’ equity accounts to a permanent owners’ equity account, retained earnings for a corporation. This is done only at the end of a fiscal year in order to reduce the temporary accounts to zero before beginning the next reporting year.Question 2–14 Prepaid expenses represent assets recorded when a cash disbursement creates benefits beyond the current reporting period. Examples are supplies on hand at the end of a period, prepaid rent, and the cost of plant and equipment.Question 2–15 The adjusting entry required when deferred revenues are earned is a debit to the deferred revenue liability and a credit to revenue.Question 2–16 Accrued liabilities are recorded when an expense has been incurred that will not be paid until a subsequent reporting period. The adjusting entry required to record an accrued liability is a debit to an expense and a credit to a liability.
2–4 Intermediate Accounting, 8/e Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Answers to Questions (continued) Question 2–17 Income statement—The purpose of the income statement is to summarize the profit-generating activities of the company during a particular period of time. It is a change statement that is reporting the changes in owners’ equity that occurred during the period as a result of revenues, expenses, gains, and losses.Statement of comprehensive income—The purpose of the statement of comprehensive income is to report the changes in shareholders’ equity during the reporting period that were not a result of transactions with owners. This statement includes net income and also other comprehensive income items.Balance sheet—The purpose of the balance sheet is to present the financial position of the company at a particular point in time. It is an organized array of assets, liabilities, and permanent owners’ equity accounts.Statement of cash flows—The purpose of the statement of cash flows is to disclose the events that caused cash to change during the period.Statement of shareholders’ equity—The purpose of the statement of shareholders’ equity is to disclose the sources of the changes in the various permanent shareholders’ equity accounts that occurred during the period. This statement includes changes resulting from investments by owners, distributions to owners, net income, and other comprehensive income.Question 2–18 A worksheet provides a means of organizing the accounting information needed to prepare adjusting and closing entries and the financial statements. This error would result in an overstatement of revenue and thus net income and retained earnings, and an understatement of liabilities.Question 2–19 Reversing entries are recorded at the beginning of a reporting period. They remove the effects of some of the adjusting entries recorded at the end of the previous reporting period. This simplifies the journal entries recorded during the new period by allowing cash payments or cash receipts to be entered directly into the expense or revenue account without regard to the accrual recorded at the end of the previous period.