College Accounting (Book Only): A Career Approach
College Accounting (Book Only): A Career Approach
12th Edition
ISBN: 9781305084087
Author: Cathy J. Scott
Publisher: Cengage Learning
bartleby

Videos

Textbook Question
Book Icon
Chapter 4, Problem 2A

You are the bookkeeper for a small but thriving business. You have asked the owner for the information you need to make adjusting entries for depreciation, supplies, insurance, and wages. He says that he’s really busy and that what you’ve done so far is “close enough.” Explain the need for adjusting entries and their effect on the owner’s balance sheet and the “bottom line” on the income statement.

Blurred answer
Students have asked these similar questions
You are the bookkeeper for a small but thriving business.  You have asked the owner for the information you need to make adjusting entries for depreciation, supplies , insurance, and wages.  He says that he's really busy and that what you've done so far is "close enough". Explain the need for adjusting entries and their effect on the owner's balance sheet and the "bottom line" of the income statement.
As an accountant, your new client Michael Sue's he's assistance in setting up his books for his business. To do this successfully, you start by showing him how you perform a transaction analysis based on the accounting equation assets equals liabilities plus owners equity. You explain to Michael how to show increases and decreases in assets liabilities and owners equity accounts using that analysis template. To help Michael understand the transaction analysis you reconcile each side of the equation by balancing out each column at the end of the transaction. complete by using the accounts cash, accounts receivable, supplies, equipment, accounts payable, notes payable, Suze capital, Suze drawing, service revenue, rent expense, salary expense, utilities expense, and advertising expense. Please record the transactions listed in the image.
You are employed as an accountant for Innovative Computing. Your company is in the process of signing a large contract with an electronics components supplier. You have a friend who works for the electronics components supplier, and you were told the company having trouble paying bills. You ask to review the financial statements of the supplier. 1.    Which financial statements would you find most helpful to determine the creditworthiness of the supplier? What information from the financial statements would you use to either support or disprove your friend’s claims? 2.    What are the four basic financial statements? What is their purpose and what does each one tell you about a company? 3.    How are the four financial statements interrelated? Which line items are used to prepare other statements? 4.    In your opinion, explain which financial statement you think is the most important?

Chapter 4 Solutions

College Accounting (Book Only): A Career Approach

Additional Business Textbook Solutions

Find more solutions based on key concepts
Knowledge Booster
Background pattern image
Accounting
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, accounting and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.
Similar questions
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
Recommended textbooks for you
Text book image
College Accounting (Book Only): A Career Approach
Accounting
ISBN:9781337280570
Author:Scott, Cathy J.
Publisher:South-Western College Pub
ACCOUNTING BASICS: Debits and Credits Explained; Author: Accounting Stuff;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhwZ9t2b3Zk;License: Standard Youtube License