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Chapter 1

Environment and Theoretical Structure of Financial Accounting
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views

Chapter 1

Environment and Theoretical Structure of Financial Accounting
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 1

Environment and Theoretical Structure of


Financial Accounting

AACSB assurance of learning standards in accounting and business education require documentation
of outcomes assessment. Although schools, departments, and faculty may approach assessment and
its documentation differently, one approach is to provide specific questions on exams that become the
basis for assessment. To aid faculty in this endeavor, we have labeled each question, exercise and
problem in Intermediate Accounting, 5e with the following AACSB learning skills:
Questions
1-1
1-2
1-3
1-4
1-5
1-6
1-7
1-8
1-9
1-10
1-11
1-12
1-13
1-14
1-15
1-16
1-17
1-18
1-19
1-20
1-21
1-22
1-23
1-24
1-25
1-26
1-27

Brief Exercises
1-1
1-2
1-3
1-4
1-5
1-6

Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
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Reflective thinking
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Reflective thinking
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Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking

Exercises
1-1
1-2
1-3
1-4
1-5
1-6
1-7
1-8
1-9
1-10
1-11
1-12
1-13
1-14
1-15

CPA/CMA
1-1
1-2
1-3
1-4
1-5
1-6
1-7
1-8
1-1
1-2
1-3

Analytic
Analytic
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
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Reflective thinking
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Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking

Analytic
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking
Reflective thinking

Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 1

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2009


1-1

QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW OF KEY TOPICS


Question 1-1
Financial accounting is concerned with providing relevant financial information about various
kinds of organizations to different types of external users. The primary focus of financial accounting
is on the financial information provided by profit-oriented companies to their present and potential
investors and creditors.

Question 1-2
Resources are efficiently allocated if they are given to enterprises that will use them to provide
goods and services desired by society and not to enterprises that will waste them. The capital markets
are the mechanism that fosters this efficient allocation of resources.

Question 1-3
Two extremely important variables that must be considered in any investment decision are the
expected rate of return and the uncertainty or risk of that expected return.

Question 1-4
In the long run, a company will be able to provide investors and creditors with a rate of return
only if it can generate a profit. That is, it must be able to use the resources provided to it to generate
cash receipts from selling a product or service that exceeds the cash disbursements necessary to
provide that product or service.

Question 1-5
The primary objective of financial accounting is to provide investors and creditors with
information that will help in evaluating the amounts, timing, and uncertainty of a business enterprises
future cash receipts and disbursements.

Question 1-6
Net operating cash flows are the difference between cash receipts and cash disbursements
during a period of time from transactions related to providing goods and services to customers. Net
operating cash flows may not be a good indicator of future cash flows because, by ignoring
uncompleted transactions, they may not match the accomplishments and sacrifices of the period.

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Answers to Questions (continued)


Question 1-7
GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) are a dynamic set of both broad and specific
guidelines that a company should follow in measuring and reporting the information in their financial
statements and related notes. It is important that all companies follow GAAP so that investors can
compare financial information across companies to make their resource allocation decisions.

Question 1-8
In 1934, Congress created the SEC and gave it the job of setting accounting and reporting
standards for companies whose securities are publicly traded. The SEC has retained the power, but
has delegated the task to private sector bodies. The current private sector body responsible for
setting accounting standards is the FASB.

Question 1-9
Auditors are independent, professional accountants who examine financial statements to express
an opinion. The opinion reflects the auditors assessment of the statements' fairness, which is
determined by the extent to which they are prepared in compliance with GAAP. The auditor adds
credibility to the financial statements, which increases the confidence of capital market participants
relying on that information.

Question 1-10
On July 30, 2002, President Bush signed into law the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The most
dramatic change to federal securities laws since the 1930s, the Act radically redesigns federal
regulation of public company corporate governance and reporting obligations. It also significantly
tightens accountability standards for directors and officers, auditors, securities analysts and legal
counsel. Student opinions as to the relative importance of the key provisions of the act will vary. Key
provisions in the order of presentation in the text are:
Creation of an Oversight Board
Corporate executive accountability
Non-audit services
Retention of work papers
Auditor rotation
Conflicts of interest
Hiring of auditor
Internal control

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1-3

Answers to Questions (continued)


Question 1-11
New accounting standards, or changes in standards, can have significant differential effects on
companies, investors and creditors, and other interest groups by causing redistribution of wealth.
There also is the possibility that standards could harm the economy as a whole by causing companies
to change their behavior.

Question 1-12
The FASB undertakes a series of elaborate information gathering steps before issuing a
substantive accounting standard to determine consensus as to the preferred method of accounting, as
well as to anticipate adverse economic consequences.

Question 1-13
The purpose of the conceptual framework is to guide the Board in developing accounting
standards by providing an underlying foundation and basic reasoning on which to consider merits of
alternatives. The framework does not prescribe GAAP.

Question 1-14
Relevance and reliability are the primary qualities that make information decision-useful.
Relevant information will possess predictive and/or feedback value and also will be provided in a
timely manner. Reliability is the extent to which information can be relied upon by users.

Question 1-15
The components of relevant information are predictive and/or feedback value and timeliness.
The components of reliable information are verifiability, representational faithfulness, and neutrality.

Question 1-16
The benefit from providing accounting information is increased decision usefulness. If the
information is relevant and reliable, it will improve the decisions made by investors and creditors.
However, there are costs to providing information that include costs to gather, process and
disseminate that information. There also are costs to users in interpreting the information as well as
possible adverse economic consequences that could result from disclosing information. Information
should not be provided unless the benefits exceed the costs.

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Answers to Questions (continued)


Question 1-17
Information is material if it is deemed to have an effect on a decision made by a user. The threshold
for materiality will depend principally on the relative dollar amount of the transaction being
considered. One consequence of materiality is that GAAP need not be followed in measuring and
reporting a transaction if that transaction is not material. The threshold for materiality has been left to
subjective judgment.

Question 1-18
1. Assets are probable future economic benefits obtained or controlled by a particular entity as
a result of past transactions or events.
2. Liabilities are probable future sacrifices of economic benefits arising from present
obligations of a particular entity to transfer assets or provide services to other entities in the
future as a result of past transactions.
3. Equity is the residual interest in the assets of any entity that remains after deducting its
liabilities.
4. Investments by owners are increases in equity resulting from transfers of resources, usually
cash, to a company in exchange for ownership interest.
5. Distributions to owners are decreases in equity resulting from transfers to owners.
6. Revenues are inflows of assets or settlements of liabilities from delivering or producing
goods, rendering services, or other activities that constitute the entitys ongoing major or
central operations.
7. Expenses are outflows or other using up of assets or incurrences of liabilities during a period
from delivering or producing goods, rendering services, or other activities that constitute the
entitys ongoing major or central operations.
8. Gains are defined as increases in equity from peripheral or incidental transactions of an
entity.
9. Losses represent decreases in equity arising from peripheral or incidental transactions of an
entity.
10.Comprehensive income is defined as the change in equity of an entity during a period from
nonowner transactions.

Question 1-19
The four basic assumptions underlying GAAP are (1) the economic entity assumption, (2) the
going concern assumption, (3) the periodicity assumption, and (4) the monetary unit
assumption.

Question 1-20
The going concern assumption means that, in the absence of information to the contrary, it is
anticipated that a business entity will continue to operate indefinitely. This assumption is
important to many broad and specific accounting principles such as the historical cost principle.

Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 1

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2009


1-5

Answers to Questions (continued)


Question 1-21
The periodicity assumption relates to needs of external users to receive timely financial
information. This assumption requires that the economic life of a company be divided into
artificial periods for financial reporting. Companies usually report to external users at least once
a year.

Question 1-22
The four key broad accounting principles that guide accounting practice are (1) the historical
cost or original transaction value principle, (2) the realization or revenue recognition principle, (3) the
matching principle, and (4) the full disclosure principle.

Question 1-23
Two important reasons to base valuation on historical cost are (1) historical cost provides
important cash flow information since it represents the cash or cash equivalent paid for an asset or
received in exchange for the assumption of a liability, and (2) historical cost valuation is the result of
an exchange transaction between two independent parties and the agreed upon exchange value is,
therefore, objective and possesses a high degree of verifiability.

Question 1-24
The realization principle requires that two criteria be satisfied before revenue can be recognized:
1. The earnings process is judged to be complete or virtually complete, and,
2. There is reasonable certainty as to the collectibility of the asset to be received (usually cash).

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Answers to Questions (concluded)


Question 1-25
The four different approaches to implementing the matching principle are:
1. Recognizing an expense based on an exact cause-and-effect relationship between a revenue
and expense event. Cost of goods sold is an example of an expense recognized by this
approach.
2. Recognizing an expense by identifying the expense with the revenues recognized in a
specific time period. Office salaries is an example of an expense recognized by this
approach.
3. Recognizing an expense by a systematic and rational allocation to specific time periods.
Depreciation is an example of an expense recognized by this approach.
4. Recognizing expenses in the period incurred, without regard to related revenues.
Advertising is an example of an expense recognized by this approach.

Question 1-26
In addition to the financial statement elements arrayed in the basic financial statements,
information is disclosed by means of parenthetical or modifying comments, notes, and supplemental
financial statements.

Question 1-27
SFAS No. 157 prioritizes the inputs companies should use when determining fair value. The
highest and most desirable inputs, Level 1, are quoted market prices in active markets for identical
assets or liabilities. Level 2 inputs are other than quoted prices that are observable including quoted
prices for similar assets or liabilities in active or inactive markets and inputs that are derived
principally from observable related market data. Level 3 inputs, the least desirable, are inputs that
reflect the entitys own assumptions about the assumptions market participants would use in pricing
the asset or liability developed based on the best information available in the circumstances.

BRIEF EXERCISES
Brief Exercise 1-1

Revenues ($340,000 + 60,000)$400,000

Expenses:
Rent ($40,000 2)
Salaries
Utilities ($50,000 + 2,000)
Net income

Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 1

(20,000)
(120,000)
(52,000)
$208,000

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1-7

(a) Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

Brief Exercise 1-2

(b) American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)


(c) Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
(1) Liabilities

Brief Exercise 1-3


(2) Assets
(3) Revenues
(4) Losses

1. The periodicity assumption

Brief Exercise 1-4

2. The economic entity assumption


3. The realization (revenue recognition) principle
4. The matching principle
1. The matching principle

Brief Exercise 1-5

2. The historical cost (original transaction value) principle


3. The economic entity assumption
1. Disagree
The full disclosure
Brief Exercise 1-6
principle
2. Agree
3. Disagree
4. Agree

The periodicity assumption


The matching principle
The realization (revenue recognition) principle

EXERCISES
Exercise
1-1
Requirement 1
Pete, Pete, and Roy
Operating Cash Flow
Cash collected
Cash disbursements:
Salaries
Utilities
Purchase of insurance policy
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1-8

Year 1
$160,000
(90,000)
(30,000)
(60,000)

Year 2
$190,000
(100,000)
(40,000)
-0Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Net operating cash flow

$(20,000)

$ 50,000

Requirement 2
Pete, Pete, and Roy
Income Statements
Revenues
Expenses:
Salaries
Utilities
Insurance
Net Income

Year 1
$170,000

Year 2
$220,000

(90,000)
(35,000)
(20,000)
$ 25,000

(100,000)
(35,000)
(20,000)
$ 65,000

Requirement 3

Year 1: Amount billed to customers


Less: Cash collected
Ending accounts receivable

$170,000
(160,000)
$ 10,000

Year 2: Beginning accounts receivable


Plus: Amounts billed to customers

$ 10,000
220,000
$230,000
(190,000)
$ 40,000

Less: Cash collected


Ending accounts receivable

Exercise 1-2Requirement 1

Revenues
Expenses:
Rent ($80,000 2)
Salaries
Travel and entertainment
Advertising
Net Income

Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 1

Year 2
$350,000

Year 3
$450,000

(40,000)
(140,000)
(30,000)
(25,000)
$115,000

(40,000)
(160,000)
(40,000)
(20,000)*
$190,000

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1-9

Requirement 2
Amount owed at the end of year one
Advertising costs incurred in year two
Amount paid in year two
Liability at the end of year two
Less cash paid in year three
Advertising expense in year three

Exercise 1-3
1. Accounting Principles Board
2. Financial Accounting Standards Board
3. Securities and Exchange Commission
4. Committee on Accounting Procedure
5. AICPA

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1-10

$ 5,000
25,000
30,000
(15,000)
15,000
(35,000)
$20,000*
Organization Pronouncements
e.
a., d., and g.
b.
c.
f.

Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Exercise 1-4

Pronouncement

Description
1. EITF Issues
2. Statements of Financial Accounting Concepts
3. Statements of Financial Accounting Standards
4. International Financial Reporting Standards
5. Industry Accounting Guides
6. Accounting Principles Board Opinions

c.
d.
f.
a.
b.
e.
Organization
Group

Exercise 1-5
1. Securities and Exchange Commission
2. Financial Executives International
3. American Institute of Certified Public Accountants
4. Institute of Management Accountants
5. Association of Investment Management and Research
1. Liability

Users
Preparers
Auditors
Preparers
Users

Exercise 1-6
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.

Distribution to owners
Revenue
Assets, liabilities and equity
Comprehensive income
Gain
Loss
Equity
Asset
Net income
Investment by owner
Expense

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1-11

List A

List B

Exercise 1-7
o

1. Predictive value

a. Decreases in equity resulting from transfers to


owners.
h
2. Relevance
b. Requires consideration of the costs and value of
information.
g
3. Timeliness
c. Important for making interfirm comparisons.
a
4. Distribution to owners
d. Applying the same accounting practices over time.
j
5. Feedback value
e. Along with relevance, a primary
decision-specific quality.
e
6. Reliability
f. Agreement between a measure and the phenomenon
it purports to represent.
n
7. Gain
g. Information is available prior to the decision.
f
8. Representational faithfulness h. Pertinent to the decision at hand.
k
9. Comprehensive income
i. Implies consensus among different measurers.
p 10. Materiality
j. Information confirms expectations.
c 11. Comparability
k. The change in equity from nonowner transactions.
m 12. Neutrality
l. The process of admitting information into financial
statements.
l 13. Recognition
m. Accounting information should not favor a particular
group.
d 14. Consistency
n. Results if an asset is sold for more than its book
value.
b 15. Cost effectiveness
o. Information is useful in predicting the future.
i 16. Verifiability
p. Concerns the relative size of an item and its effect on
decisions.

Exercise 1-8
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

1. Materiality

Neutrality
Consistency
Timeliness
Predictive value, feedback value and timeliness
Representational faithfulness
Comparability
Cost effectiveness

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

List A

List B

Exercise 1-9
d

1. Matching principle

g
e
i

2. Periodicity
3. Historical cost principle
4. Materiality

h
c

5. Realization principle
6. Going concern assumption

7. Monetary unit assumption

a
f

8. Economic entity assumption


9. Full-disclosure principle

a. The enterprise is separate from its owners and other


entities.
b. A common denominator is the dollar.
c. The entity will continue indefinitely.
d. Record expenses in the period the related revenue is
recognized.
e. The original transaction value upon acquisition.
f. All information that could affect decisions should be
reported.
g. The life of an enterprise can be divided into artificial
time periods.
h. Criteria usually satisfied at point of sale.
i. Concerns the relative size of an item and its effect on
decisions.

1. The economic entity assumption

Exercise 1-10
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

The periodicity assumption


The matching principle (also the going concern assumption)
The historical cost (original transaction value) principle
The realization (revenue recognition) principle
The going concern assumption
Materiality
1. The historical cost (original transaction value) principle

Exercise 1-11
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

The periodicity assumption


The realization (revenue recognition) principle
The economic entity assumption
The matching principle; materiality
The full disclosure principle

Exercise 1-12

1. Disagree
assumption

Solutions Manual, Vol.1, Chapter 1

Monetary unit
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2009
1-13

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Disagree
Agree
Disagree
Agree
Agree
Disagree

Exercise 1-13
2. Disagree
3. Disagree
4. Agree
5. Agree
6. Disagree

Exercise 1-14

Full disclosure principle


The matching principle
Historical cost (original transaction value) principle
Realization (revenue recognition) principle
Materiality
Periodicity assumption
1. Disagree
This is a violation of the
historical cost (original
transaction value) principle.

This is a violation of the economic entity assumption.


This is a violation of the realization (revenue recognition)
principle.
The company is conforming to the matching principle.
The company is conforming to the full disclosure principle.
This is a violation of the periodicity assumption.
Statement Assumption, Principle, Constraint

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.

Exercise 1-15
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

f.
h.
g.
e.
c.
a.
i.
j.
k.
b.
d.
1.

Realization principle
Full-disclosure principle
Matching principle
Historical cost principle
Periodicity assumption
Economic entity assumption
Cost effectiveness
Materiality
Conservatism
Going concern assumption
Monetary unit assumption

d
c
d
b
b

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

CPA / CMA REVIEW QUESTIONS


CPA Exam Questions
1. a. Auditor independence is not addressed in FASBs Concept Statement No. 2.
2. c. According to the FASBs Concept Statement No. 2, timeliness is an attribute
of relevance.
3. b. The FASB is a private body, though the SEC has the ultimate authority to set
accounting standards. The FASB does not set auditing standards nor does it
consist entirely of the members of the American Institute of CPAs.
4. a. Feedback value is an ingredient of the primary quality of relevance.
5. d. Predictive value is an ingredient of relevance, not reliability.
6. c. Timeliness is an ingredient of relevance.
7. b. The FASBs Concepts Statement No. 1 states that one objective of financial
reporting is to provide information that is useful to present and potential
investors and creditors and other users in making rational investment, credit
and other similar decisions.
8. d. Comprehensive income excludes only owner transactions.

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1-15

CMA Exam Questions


1. b. Accounting standards in the United States for nongovernmental entities are set
primarily by private sector. The principle standard setters are the FASB and the
AICPAs AcSEC.
2. c. Accounting information is reliable if it is verifiable, is a faithful representation,
and is reasonably free of error or bias.
3. c. The four fundamental recognition criteria are: 1) the item meets the definition of
an element of financial statements, 2) the item has an attribute measurable with
sufficient reliability, 3) the information is relevant, and 4) the information is
reliable. In addition, revenue should be recognized when it is realized or
realizable and earned.

CASES
Judgment
Case 1-1
Requirement 1
In the 1934 Securities Act, Congress gave the SEC the job of setting accounting
and reporting standards for companies whose securities are publicly traded. However,
the SEC, a government appointed body, always has delegated the task of setting
accounting standards to the private sector. It is important to understand that the SEC
delegated only the task, not the power, to set standards. The power still lies with the
SEC. If the SEC does not agree with a particular standard promulgated by the private
sector, it can, and has in the past, required a change in the standard.
Requirement 2
1. SEC employees may not have the expertise necessary to set accounting
standards.
2. By delegating to a private sector body, the cost of setting accounting standards
is not borne by taxpayers.
3. By delegating to a private sector body, standards may gain greater acceptance
than if dictated by a public (government) body.
4. The SEC now has a buffer group between itself and concerned constituents.
The SEC avoids criticism if a mistake is made by the FASB.

Research Case 1-2Requirement 2


The 1933 Act has two basic objectives:
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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

1. To require that investors be provided with material information concerning


securities offered for public sale; and
2. To prevent misrepresentation, deceit, and other fraud in the sale of securities.
Requirement 3
EDGAR:
EDGAR, the Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval system, performs
automated collection, validation, indexing, acceptance, and forwarding of submissions
by companies and others who are required by law to file forms with the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission. Publicly traded domestic companies use EDGAR to make
the majority of their filings. Form 10-K, or 10-KSB, which includes the annual report,
is required to be filed on EDGAR. Filings by foreign companies are not required to be
filed on EDGAR, but some of these companies do so voluntarily.

Research Case 1-3Requirement 1


The mission of the Financial Accounting Standards Board is to establish and
improve standards of financial accounting and reporting for the guidance and education
of the public, including issuers, auditors, and users of financial information.
Requirement 2
Answers to these questions will vary depending on the date the research is
conducted.
Requirement 3
The FASB receives many requests for action on various financial accounting and
reporting topics from all segments of a diverse constituency, including the SEC. The
auditing profession is sensitive to emerging trends in practice, and consequently it is a
frequent source of requests. Overall, requests for action include both new topics and
suggested review or reconsideration of existing pronouncements.
The FASB is alert to trends in financial reporting through observation of published
reports, liaison with interested organizations, and from recommendations from and
discussions with the Emerging Issues Task Force. In addition, the staff receives many
technical inquiries by letter and by telephone, which may provide evidence that a
particular topic, or aspect of an existing pronouncement, has become a problem. The
FASB also is alert to changes in the financial reporting environment
that may be brought about by new legislation or regulatory decisions.
The Board turns to many other organizations and groups for advice and
information on various matters, including its agenda. Among the groups with which
liaison is maintained are the Financial Accounting Standards Advisory Council, the
Accounting Standards Executive Committee and Auditing Standards Board of the
AICPA, and the appropriate committees of such organizations as the Association for
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Investment Management and Research, Financial Executives Institute, Institute of


Management Accountants, and Robert Morris Associates.
Requirement 4
Answers to these questions will vary depending on the date the research is
conducted.
Requirement 5
Answers to these questions will vary depending on the date the research is
conducted.

Research Case 1-4Requirement 1


The IASB is committed to developing, in the public interest, a single set of high
quality, understandable and enforceable global accounting standards that require
transparent and comparable information in general purpose financial statements. In
addition, the IASB co-operates with national accounting standard-setters to achieve
convergence in accounting standards around the world.
Requirement 2
The IASB has 14 Board members, each with one vote.
Requirement 3
The answers to this question will vary depending on the date the research is
conducted. In 2007, the chairman of the IASB was Sir David Tweedie.
Requirement 4
London, United Kingdom

Research Case 1-5Requirement 2


In 1978, Chinas enterprise reform program was initiated. Prior to 1978, all
business enterprises were state owned and run. Now, Chinas companies exhibit a
considerable range of ownership structures. For example, the Contract Responsibility
System was introduced to provide financial incentives to both workers and managers of
state-owned enterprises. In addition, many state-owned enterprises were converted
into companies with limited liabilities similar to corporations in the United States.
Requirement 3
The author feels that the accounting environment in China differs considerably
from what is typically presumed by IAS.
In particular, the lack of
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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

independent/professional auditing in China implies that the proposed detailed IASbased standards may be counterproductive in China.

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In the long run, a company will be able to

Communication Case 1-6provide investors with a return only if it can generate


a profit. That is, it must be able to use the resources
provided by investors and creditors to generate cash receipts from selling a product or
service that exceed the cash disbursements necessary to provide that product or service.
If this excess cash can be generated, the marketplace is implicitly saying that societys
resources have been efficiently allocated. The marketplace is assigning a value to the
product or service that exceeds the value assigned to the resources used to produce that
product or service.
Pollution costs to society should be borne by the
company/individual causing the costs to be incurred. If they are, and the pollutioncausing company can still generate a profit, then societys resources are still being
allocated efficiently. From this perspective, it appears that information on pollution
costs is relevant information to financial statement users.
However, even though this information might be relevant, it would not be reliable.
For example, how could we objectively measure the costs to society of dumping
hazardous waste into a river? Fish and other river-life will die, drinking water will
contain more pollutants, and the river will be a less desirable place for recreation.
Some of these costs can be quantified (estimated), but others cant.
It is important that each student actively participate in the process of arriving at a
solution. Domination by one or two individuals should be discouraged. Students
should be encouraged to contribute to the group discussion by (a) offering information
on relevant issues, and (b) clarifying or modifying ideas already expressed, or (c)
suggesting alternative direction.

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Communication Case 1-7

Suggested Grading Concepts and Grading


Scheme:

Content (70%)
_______ 30 Briefly outlines the standard setting process.
______ Role of FASB, SEC.
______ The process.
_______ 20 Explains the meaning of economic consequences.
_______ 20 Discusses the need to balance accounting
considerations and economic consequences.
______
_______ 70 points
Writing (30%)
_______ 6 Terminology and tone appropriate to the audience of
a business journal.
_______ 12 Organization permits ease of understanding.
______ Introduction that states purpose.
______ Paragraphs that separate main points.
_______ 12 English
______ Sentences grammatically clear and well organized,
concise.
______ Word selection.
______ Spelling.
______ Grammar and punctuation.
______
_______ 30 points

Ethics Case 1-8

Discussion should include these elements.

Auditors' Role in Examining Financial Statements:


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The function of the auditor is to assure the fairness of financial statements and
their compliance with GAAP, not the verification of account correctness. As some
items in financial statements are the result of estimates, auditors are unable to provide
an opinion as to the exactness of an entity's financial position. The AICPA, in
Statement on Auditing Standards 5, suggests that "present fairly" correlates to
presenting financial information that is believable, reliable, and not misleading to users
of the financial statements.
An auditor must provide an independent opinion on an entity's financial statements
even though the entity pays the audit fee and the audit company performs other services
such as the preparation of tax returns. Sarbanes-Oxley significantly restricts the
additional services that an auditor can perform for an audit client.
Who is affected?
Auditors
Company management
Company employees and labor unions
Current and future shareholders
Creditors
Financial analysts
Government entities
Society in general
Ethical Values:
Ethical values pertaining to auditor responsibility include honesty, integrity, and
service to the public, lack of bias, independence in attitude as well as appearance, and
quality of work in conducting the audit. The AICPA and most state Rules of Conduct
demand these qualities of public auditors.

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Ethics Case 1-8 (concluded)


Ethical issues or challenges:
1. Pressure from management to bias the audit opinion by threatening to withhold
audit fee payment, to hire another audit firm, or to assign tax preparation work
to another audit firm.
2. Pressure from management to bias the audit opinion by providing an expensive
gift or an outright bribe to the auditor. Auditors should refuse all but nominal
gifts from their clients.
3. Pressure to bias the audit opinion in favor of the client because the auditor, or
family member, has a financial interest in the client beyond the audit fee. The
interest could be in the form of an investment or a loan to or from the client.
4. Pressure to bias the audit opinion in favor of the client because the auditor, or
family member, has current or future employment or is in a position of
influence with the client.
5. An unfavorable opinion may provoke a lawsuit by investors and other injured
parties against both the company and the auditors. Fear of litigation may
prompt the auditors to give a favorable or clean opinion, when misleading
information exists in the financial statements.
The two primary qualitative characteristics of
accounting information are relevance and reliability.
Judgment Case 1-9However, these qualities often can conflict, requiring a tradeoff between various degrees of relevance and reliability. A
forecast of a financial variable may possess a high degree of
relevance to investors and creditors. However, a forecast necessarily contains
subjectivity in the estimation of future events. Therefore, because of a low degree of
reliability, generally accepted accounting principles do not require companies to
provide forecasts of any financial variables.

Judgment Case 1-10Requirement 1


Mary will be able to compare the financial statements due to the existence of
generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). These are a dynamic set of both
broad and specific guidelines that companies should follow when measuring and
reporting the information in their financial statements and related notes.
Requirement 2
Auditors examine financial statements to express an opinion on their compliance
with GAAP.

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Requirement 1

Judgment Case 1-11

The desired benefit is that the new standard will provide a better set of information
to external users. This will then increase the efficiency of the resource allocation
process. Better is defined by the FASB in terms of an appropriate combination of
relevance and reliability.
Requirement 2
The costs could include increased information-gathering, processing and
dissemination costs to the companies affected, increased interpreting costs to users, and
adverse economic consequences to the companies, their investors, creditors,
employees, other interest groups as well as to society as a whole.
Requirement 3
The FASB undertakes a series of elaborate information gathering steps before
issuing a substantive accounting standard. These steps include open hearings,
deliberations, and requests for written comments. These steps provide information to
the FASB as to the possible benefits and costs of the new standard.

Judgment Case 1-12Requirement 1


The realization principle requires that two criteria be satisfied before revenue can
be recognized:
1. The earnings process is judged to be complete or virtually complete.
2. There is reasonable certainty as to the collectibility of the asset to be received
(which is usually cash).
Requirement 2
Disagree. The second criterion necessary for revenue recognition has been
satisfied. However, the earnings process is not complete. Revenue should be
recognized over the rental period, not at the beginning of the period.
Requirement 1

Analysis Case 1-13


The term matched with revenues means that an attempt is made to recognize
expenses in the same period as the related revenues. Implicit in this definition is a
cause-and-effect relationship between revenue and expense. However, difficulties arise
in trying to identify cause-and-effect relationships. Many expenses are not directly
incurred because of a revenue event.
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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Requirement 2
The four different approaches to implementing the matching principle are:
1. Recognizing an expense based on an exact cause-and-effect relationship
between a revenue and expense event. Cost of goods sold is an example of an
expense recognized by this approach.
2. Recognizing an expense by identifying the expense with the revenues
recognized in a specific time period. Office salaries is an example of an
expense recognized by this approach.
3. Recognizing an expense by a systematic and rational allocation to specific time
periods. Depreciation is an example of an expense recognized by this
approach.
4. Recognizing expenses in the period incurred, without regard to related
revenues. Advertising is an example of an expense recognized by this
approach.

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Analysis Case 1-13 (concluded)


Requirement 3
a. The cost of producing a product
b. The cost of advertising
c. The cost of monthly rent on the office building
d. The salary of an office employee
e. Depreciation on an office building

1.
4.
2.
2.
3.

Judgment Case 1-14Requirement 1


The key factor is whether or not the expenditure creates a benefit beyond the
current period. If it does, then the expenditure should be capitalized and expensed in
future periods when the benefits from that asset are realized. For example, if the
expenditure is for the purchase of a machine that will be used for five years to produce
products, the expenditure creates future benefits and should be capitalized.
On the other hand, if the expenditure is for this months rent, no benefits beyond
the current period are created and the expenditure should be expensed now.
Requirement 2
The key accounting principle related to this decision is the matching principle,
which states that expenses are recognized in the same period as the related revenues.
Requirement 3
Yes, the materiality constraint. If an expenditure creates a benefit beyond the
current period but the amount is below the materiality threshold, companies often
expense rather than capitalize.

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Intermediate Accounting,5/e

Real World Case 1-15Requirement 1


The company's fiscal year-end was October 31, 2007.
Requirement 2
a. Total net revenues
b. Total operating expenses
c. Net income (earnings)
d. Total assets
e. Total stockholders' equity

=
=
=
=
=

$104,286 million
$ 95,567 million
$ 7,264 million
$ 88,699 million
$ 38,526 million

Requirement 3
The balance sheet reports 2,580 million shares of common stock issued as of
October 31, 2007.
Requirement 4
The presentation of more than one year facilitates the ability of investors and
creditors to compare the profitability of the company over time. This, in turn, provides
important information for predicting future results.

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