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SOLUTIONS MANUAL Frank Wood’s Business Accounting 1 & 2 ELEVENTH EDITION Frank Wood BSc(Econ), FCA and Alan Sangster BA, MSc, CertTESOL, CA $12.69   Add to cart

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SOLUTIONS MANUAL Frank Wood’s Business Accounting 1 & 2 ELEVENTH EDITION Frank Wood BSc(Econ), FCA and Alan Sangster BA, MSc, CertTESOL, CA

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SOLUTIONS MANUAL This solutions manual contains answers to all the questions not already answered in Business Accounting 1 and Business Accounting 2. It can be seen that there are a considerable number of questions in both text- books. About one-half of these have the answers at the back of the ...

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  • December 17, 2021
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Available practice questions

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Some examples from this set of practice questions

1.

Contribution margin means: A)what remains from total sales after deducting fixed expenses. B)what remains from total sales after deducting cost of goods sold. C)the sum of cost of goods sold and variable expenses. D)what remains from total sales after deducting all variable expenses.

Answer: what remains from total sales after deducting all variable expenses.

2.

sunk cost is: A)a cost which may be saved by not adopting an alternative. B)a cost which may be shifted to the future with little or no effect on current operations. C)a cost which cannot be avoided because it has already been incurred. D)a cost which does not entail any dollar outlay but which is relevant to the decision-making process.

Answer: a cost which cannot be avoided because it has already been incurred.

3.

Departmental overhead rates are generally preferred to plant-wide overhead rates when: A) the activities of the various departments in the plant are not homogeneous. B) the activities of the various departments in the plant are homogeneous. C) most of the overhead costs are fixed. D) all departments in the plant are heavily automated.

Answer: A) the activities of the various departments in the plant are not homogeneous.

4.

On the Schedule of Cost of Goods Manufactured, the final Cost of Goods Manufactured figure represents: A)the amount of cost charged to Work in Process during the period. B)the amount of cost transferred from Finished Goods to Cost of Goods Sold during the period. C)the amount of cost placed into production during the period. D)the amount of cost of goods completed during the current year whether they were started before or during the current year.

Answer: D)the amount of cost of goods completed during the current year whether they were started before or during the current year.

5.

Overapplied manufacturing overhead means that: A)the applied manufacturing overhead cost was less than the actual manufacturing overhead cost. B)the applied manufacturing overhead cost was greater than the actual manufacturing overhead cost. C)the estimated manufacturing overhead cost was less than the actual manufacturing overhead cost. D)the estimated manufacturing overhead cost was less than the applied manufacturing overhead cost.

Answer: the applied manufacturing overhead cost was greater than the actual manufacturing overhead cost.

6.

Buker Corporation bases its predetermined overhead rate on the estimated machine-hours for the upcoming year. Data for the upcoming year appear below: Estimated machine-hours 74,000 Estimated variable manufacturing overhead $7.67 per machine hour Estimated total fixed manufacturing overhead $1,630,960 The predetermined overhead rate for the recently completed year was closest to: A) $22.04 B) $29.59 C) $7.67 D) $29.71 D) $29.71 Estimated total manufacturing overhead = $1,630,960 + ($7.67 per machine-hour × 74,000 machine-hours) = $2,198,540Predetermined overhead rate = Estimated total manufacturing overhead ÷ Estimated total amount of the allocation base = $2,198,540 ÷ 74,000 machine-hours = $29.71 per machine-hour

Answer: D) $29.71 Estimated total manufacturing overhead = $1,630,960 + ($7.67 per machine-hour × 74,000 machine-hours) = $2,198,540Predetermined overhead rate = Estimated total manufacturing overhead ÷ Estimated total amount of the allocation base = $2,198,540 ÷ 74,000 machine-hours = $29.71 per machine-hour

7.

Hibshman Corporation bases its predetermined overhead rate on the estimated machine-hours for the upcoming year. At the beginning of the most recently completed year, the Corporation estimated the machine-hours for the upcoming year at 10,000 machine-hours. The estimated variable manufacturing overhead was $6.82 per machine-hour and the estimated total fixed manufacturing overhead was $230,200. The predetermined overhead rate for the recently completed year was closest to: A) $29.84 per machine-hour B) $23.15 per machine-hour C) $23.02 per machine-hour D) $6.82 per machine-hour

Answer: A) $29.84 Estimated total manufacturing overhead = $230,200 + ($6.82 per machine-hour × 10,000 machine-hours) = $298,400Predetermined overhead rate = Estimated total manufacturing overhead ÷ Estimated total amount of the allocation base = $298,400 ÷ 10,000 machine-hours = $29.84 per machine-hour

SOLUTIONS MANUAL
Frank Wood’s Business Accounting 1 & 2
ELEVENTH EDITION
Frank Wood BSc(Econ), FCA
and
Alan Sangster BA, MSc, CertTESOL, CA
ISBN 978-0-273-71824-6
© Pearson Education Limited 2008
Lecturers adopting the main text are permitted to download
and photocopy this manual as required. Pearson Education Limited
Edinburgh Gate
HarlowEssex CM20 2JEEngland
and Associated Companies around the world
Visit us on the World Wide Web at
www.pearsoned.co.uk
Eleventh edition published in 2008
© Pearson Education Limited 2008The rights of Frank Wood and Alan Sangster to be identified as authors of this Work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. Permission is hereby given for the material in this
publication to be reproduced for OHP transparencies and student handouts,without express permission of the Publishers, for educational purposes only.In all other cases, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored ina retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without either the priorwritten permission of the Publishers or a licence permitting restricted copyingin the United Kingdom issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd,Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London ECIN 8TS.
ISBN 978-0-273-71824-61 0987654321
11 10 09 08
Printed in Great Britain Contents
Preface iv
Part 1 Business Accounting 1 1
Students and examination success 3Answers 6
Part 2 Business Accounting 2 93
Answers 95 Preface
This solutions manual contains answers to all the questions not already answered in Business Accounting 1
and Business Accounting 2 . It can be seen that there are a considerable number of questions in both text-
books. About one-half of these have the answers at the back of the relevant textbook, while the remainderof the answers are contained in this manual.
The result of this is to give a high degree of flexibility in the use of the textbooks. To illustrate the contents
of each chapter, the questions can be used which have answers in the textbook. Any students who areabsent can be told what they have missed and can look up the answers themselves. Students who arrive lateon the course can also be told what work to do and they can check their own progress against the answersas given. However, quite obviously work must be set, either in class or for homework, for which answersare not available to students. This manual can therefore be used to check such work.
Whilst every endeavour has been made to show workings quite fully, it must be appreciated that there are
often different ways of getting to the same answer. This manual would be unduly lengthy and complicated ifevery version of arriving at the answer were to be shown. The methods chosen are therefore those judgedto be the best from a teaching point of view.
Frank Wood and Alan Sangster
By writing on letterheaded paper of the institution where you teach, giving details of the course for which
you use Business Accounting 1 or Business Accounting 2 with your classes, you can obtain complimentary
copies of this manual. This manual is not available for students, nor is it in any way available for sale tothe general public. It is also available on the lecturer’s password-protected section of the Frank Woodwebsite at www.pearsoned.co.uk/wood

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