
Concept explainers
Requirement1:
The Journal entries to be passed for the transactions for manufacturing the product.
Requirement1:

Answer to Problem 5E
Solution: The Journal entries for the transactions occurred for the month of October for Polaris Company is as follows:
IN THE BOOKS OF POLARIS COMPANY |
||||||
FOR THEOCTOBER MONTH |
||||||
S.NO. |
ACCOUNTS TITLES AND EXPLANATIONS |
DEBIT IN $ |
CREDIT IN $ |
|||
a. |
Raw Material Inventory Account Dr. |
210,000 |
||||
Accounts Payable |
210,000 |
|||||
(For raw material purchased on account) |
||||||
b. |
Work in Process Inventory Account Dr. |
178,000 |
||||
Manufacturing |
12,000 |
|||||
Raw Material Inventory Account |
190,000 |
|||||
(For issue of both direct anda indirect material to production) |
||||||
c. |
Work in Process Inventory Account Dr. |
90,000 |
||||
Manufacturing Overheads Account Dr. |
110,000 |
|||||
Wages Payable |
200,000 |
|||||
(For direct and indirect wages accrued and incurred for production) |
||||||
d. |
Manufacturing Overheads Account Dr. |
40,000 |
||||
|
40,000 |
|||||
(For depreciation charged on factory Equipment) |
||||||
e. |
Manufacturing overheads Account Dr. |
70,000 |
||||
Accrued manufacturing overheads Account |
70,000 |
|||||
(For manufacturing overhead incurred during the month) |
||||||
f. |
Work in Process Inventory Account Dr. |
240,000 |
||||
Manufacturing overheads Account |
240,000 |
|||||
(For manufacturing overheads applied to work in process based on machine hours) |
||||||
g. |
Finished Goods Inventory Account Dr. |
520,000 |
||||
Work in Process Inventory Account |
520,000 |
|||||
(For goods completed during the month) |
||||||
h. |
Cost of Goods sold account Dr. |
480,000 |
||||
Finished Goods Inventory Account |
480,000 |
|||||
(for cost of goods sold transferred from finished goods) |
||||||
|
600,000 |
|||||
Sales Revenue Account |
600,000 |
|||||
(For sales made on account) |
||||||
Explanation of Solution
The explanation for each
- Raw material purchased increases the inventory balance and the liability.
- Raw material used as direct and indirect material shall be debited to work in process and manufacturing overheads account.
- Wages incurred shall be charged in work in process inventory for direct wages and in manufacturing overheads for indirect wages.
Depreciation charged on equipment shall be indirect expense debited to manufacturing overheads.- Overheads incurred during the period shall be debited to manufacturing overheads.
- Manufacturing overheads are applied to work in process inventory on the basis of pre-determined overhead rate and actual machine hours worked. The amount is computed as follows:
Pre-determined Overhead rate: $ 8 per machine hour
Machine hours: 30,000 machine hours
Overheads Applied: Machine hours × Pre-determined overhead rate
= 30,000 hours × $ 8.00 per machine hour= $240,000
Cost of Goods sold: $480,000
Profit Margin =25% of cost
Gross margin= $480,000 × 25% = $120,000
Sales Revenue = Cost of Goods sold + Gross Margin = $480,000+$120,000 = $600,000
Requirement2:
The T-Accounts shall be made for manufacturing overheads and work in process account.
Requirement2:

Answer to Problem 5E
Solution: The T-accounts are presented as follows:
MANUFACTURING OVERHEADS |
|||||
Raw material Inv. |
12,000 |
Work in process |
240,000 |
||
Wages Payable |
110,000 |
||||
Accumulated Depreciation |
40,000 |
||||
Accrued Overheads |
70,000 |
||||
Ending balance |
8,000 |
||||
WORK IN PROCESS INVENTORY |
|||||
Beginning Balance |
42,000 |
Finished Goods Inventory |
520,000 |
||
Raw material Inv. |
178,000 |
||||
Wages Payable |
90,000 |
||||
Manufacturing Overheads |
240,000 |
||||
Ending Balance |
30,000 |
Explanation of Solution
- The Manufacturing overheads accounts is prepared by debiting the indirect cost actually incurred during the period and credited with the amount of overheads applied during the period.
- Work in process accounts shall be prepared by debiting the direct cost incurred and manufacturing overheads applied and credited with the amount of goods completed during the year.
To conclude, it must be said that ending manufacturing overheads represent under/over-applied overheads and Ending work in process balance represent the cost of goods still in process.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 3 Solutions
Managerial Accounting
- The formula to calculate the amount of manufacturing overhead to allocate to jobs is: Question content area bottom Part 1 A. predetermined overhead rate times the actual amount of the allocation base used by the specific job. B. predetermined overhead rate divided by the actual allocation base used by the specific job. C. predetermined overhead rate times the estimated amount of the allocation base used by the specific job. D. predetermined overhead rate times the actual manufacturing overhead used on the specific job.arrow_forwardThe Fantastic Ice Cream Shoppe sold 9,000 servings of ice cream during June for $4 per serving. The shop purchases the ice cream in large tubs from the Dream Ice Cream Company. Each tub costs the shop $9 and has enough ice cream to fill 20 ice cream cones. The shop purchases the ice cream cones for $0.10 each from a local warehouse club. Located in an outdoor mall, the rent for the shop space is $2,050 per month. The shop expenses $290 a month for the depreciation of the shop's furniture and equipment. During June, the shop incurred an additional $2,700 of other operating expenses (75% of these were fixed costs).arrow_forwardHello tutor please provide correct answer general accounting questionarrow_forward
- Robinson Manufacturing discovered the following information in its accounting records: $519,800 in direct materials used, $223,500 in direct labor, and $775,115 in manufacturing overhead. The Work in Process Inventory account had an opening balance of $72,400 and a closing balance of $87,600. Calculate the company’s Cost of Goods Manufactured.arrow_forwardSanjay would like to organize HOS (a business entity) as either an S corporation or as a corporation (taxed as a C corporation) generating a 16 percent annual before-tax return on a $350,000 investment. Sanjay’s marginal tax rate is 24 percent and the corporate tax rate is 21 percent. Sanjay’s marginal tax rate on individual capital gains and dividends is 15 percent. HOS will pay out its after-tax earnings every year to either its members or its shareholders. If HOS is taxed as an S corporation, the business income allocation would qualify for the deduction for qualified business income (assume no limitations on the deduction). Assume Sanjay does not owe any additional Medicare tax or net investment income tax. Required 1. For each scenario, C corporation and S corporation, calculate the total tax (entity level and owner level). 2. For each scenario, C corporation and S corporation, calculate the effective tax rate. C Corporation S Corporation 1. Total tax…arrow_forwardI need correct solution of this general accounting questionarrow_forward
- Hii expert please given correct answer general accountingarrow_forwardMarkowis Corp has collected the following data concerning its maintenance costs for the pest 6 months units produced Total cost July 18,015 36,036 august 37,032 40,048 September 36,036 55,055 October 22,022 38,038 November 40,040 74,575 December 38,038 62,062 Compute the variable coot per unit using the high-low method. (Round variable cost per mile to 2 decimal places e.g. 1.25) Compute the fixed cost elements using the high-low method.arrow_forwardUse the following data to determine the total dollar amount of assets to be classified as current assets. Marigold Corp. Balance Sheet December 31, 2025 Cash and cash equivalents Accounts receivable Inventory $67000 Accounts payable $126000 86500 Salaries and wages payable 11100 149000 Bonds payable 161500 Prepaid insurance 83000 Total liabilities 298600 Stock investments (long-term) 193000 Land 199500 Buildings $226000 Common stock 309400 Less: Accumulated depreciation (53500) 172500 Retained earnings 475500 Trademarks 133000 Total stockholders' equity 784900 Total assets $1083500 Total liabilities and stockholders' equity $1083500 ○ $269100 $385500 ○ $236500 ○ $578500arrow_forward
- Should the machine be replaced?arrow_forwardUsing the following balance sheet and income statement data, what is the total amount of working capital? Current assets $39700 Net income $52100 Current liabilities 19800 Stockholders' equity 96700 Average assets 198400 Total liabilities 52100 Total assets 148800 Average common shares outstanding was 18600. ○ $9900 ○ $39700 ○ $19900 ○ $12400arrow_forwardSuppose that Old Navy has assets of $4265000, common stock of $1018000, and retained earnings of $659000. What are the creditors' claims on their assets? ○ $2588000 ○ $3906000 ○ $1677000 ○ $4624000arrow_forward
- AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337272094Author:WARREN, Carl S., Reeve, James M., Duchac, Jonathan E.Publisher:Cengage Learning,Accounting Information SystemsAccountingISBN:9781337619202Author:Hall, James A.Publisher:Cengage Learning,
- Horngren's Cost Accounting: A Managerial Emphasis...AccountingISBN:9780134475585Author:Srikant M. Datar, Madhav V. RajanPublisher:PEARSONIntermediate AccountingAccountingISBN:9781259722660Author:J. David Spiceland, Mark W. Nelson, Wayne M ThomasPublisher:McGraw-Hill EducationFinancial and Managerial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781259726705Author:John J Wild, Ken W. Shaw, Barbara Chiappetta Fundamental Accounting PrinciplesPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education





