Accounting: What the Numbers Mean
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781259535314
Author: David Marshall, Wayne William McManus, Daniel Viele
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 4, Problem 4.20E

Exercise 4.20

LO 6, 7

Transaction analysis using T-accounts This exercise provides practice in understanding the operation of T-accounts and transaction analysis. For each situation, you must solve for a missing amount. Use a T-account for the balance sheet account, show in a horizontal model, or prepare journal entries for the information provided. In each case, there is only one debit entry and one credit entry in the account during the month.

Example:

Accounts Payable had a balance of $6.000 at the beginning of the month and $5,400 at the end of the month. During the

month, payments to suppliers amounted to $16,000. Calculate the purchases on account during the month.

Solution:

    Accounts Payable
    Beginning Dr. Accounts Dr. Inventory 15.400
    balance 6,000 Payable .... 16,000 Cr. Accounts
    Payment 16,000 Purchase ?=15,400 Cr. Cash ....

16,000Payable15.400 Ending Payments to suppliers. Purchases on account. balance 5,400

  1. Accounts Receivable had a balance of $8,100 at the beginning of the month and $3,300 at the end of the month. Credit sales totaled $45,000 during the month. Calculate the cash collected from customers during the month, assuming that all sales were made on account.
  2. The Supplies account had a balance of $17,500 at the beginning of the month and $23,300 at the end of the month. The cost of supplies used during the month was $76,100. Calculate the cost of supplies purchased during the month.
  3. Wages Payable had a balance of $15,200 at the beginning of the month. During the month, $62,000 of wages were paid to employees. Wages Expense accrued during the month totaled $78,000. Calculate the balance of Wages Payable at the end of the month.

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Please help with the following question    COMPLETION STATEMENTS ​1.​Notes and accounts receivable that result from sales transactions are often called______________ receivables.   ​2.​Two accounting problems associated with accounts receivable are (1) ______________ and (2) ______________ accounts receivable.   ​3.​The net amount expected to be collected in cash from receivables is the _____________.   ​4.​When credit sales are made, _________________ Expense is considered a normal and necessary risk of doing business on a credit basis.   ​5.​The two methods used in accounting for uncollectible accounts are the ____________ method and the ______________ method.   ​6.​Allowance for Doubtful Accounts is a_____________ account which is ______________ from Accounts Receivable on the balance sheet.   ​7.​When the allowance method is used to account for uncollectible accounts, ____________ is debited when an account is determined to be uncollectible.   ​8.​The _________________ basis of…
T-ACCOUNT FORMULAS I need to know how to solve for missing amounts on T-Accounts. I know what T-Accounts are, so I do not necessarily need that explanation.  I need a mathematical type of equation formula.   For Ex: Beginning Balance=Ending Balance + Debits -Credits. I need to know the formulas for each instance. 1) Beginning Balance that is on the DR side 2) MIssing transaction amount on the DR side 3) Ending Balance on the DR side 4) Beginning Balance that is on the CR side 5) Missing transaction amount that is on the CR side 6) Ending Balance that is on the CR side.
Question 16 Each entry in the accounts receivable credit column of a journal is an amount that: O Has been collected from a customer. O Has been paid to a vendor. O Will be collected from a customer. O ill be paid to a vendor.
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