Journalization: It means record of financial data related to business transactions in a journal in a manner so that debit equals credit. It provides an audit trail to the auditor and a means to analyze the effects of transactions to an organization’s financial health.
Rules of
- Assets: Increase in asset should be debit and decrease should be credit.
- Liabilities: Increase in liabilities should be credit and decrease should be debit.
- Equity: Increase in Equity should be credit and decrease should be debit.
- Expense: Increase in expense should be debit and decrease should be credit.
- Revenue: Increase in revenue should be credit and decrease should be debit.
Credit card: It refers to the card made of plastic and issued by a bank. It provides an individual to buy goods and services on credit when they have shortage of cash.
Perpetual inventory system: It refers to the system of recording transaction related to inventories at the time of their occurrence. Each sale and purchase is recorded at the time they occurred.
To prepare: Journal entries for the given credit card sales transactions.
Explanation of Solution
1.
Sold $20,000 of merchandise, which cost $15,000, on MasterCard credit cards. MasterCard charges a 5% fee.
Date | Account Title and Explanation | Post ref | Debit($) | Credit($) |
Cash | 19,000 | |||
Credit Card Expense | 1,000 | |||
Sales | 20,000 | |||
(Being sales of $20,000 is recorded payment for which is made with MasterCard credit card ) |
- Since payment with credit cards includes immediately recognition of cash to the company and cash is an asset account, it is debited when it is increased.
- Since payment with credit card includes some charges for the company and it is an expense account, it is debited when it is increased.
- Since sales of merchandise have been made and sales is a revenue account, it is credited when it is increased.
Date | Account Title and Explanation | Post ref | Debit($) | Credit($) |
Cost of Goods Sold | 15,000 | |||
Merchandise Inventory | 15,000 | |||
(Being cost of goods sold is recorded ) |
- Since the cost of merchandise sold is $15,000 and company is using perpetual inventory system
- Cost of Goods Sold account is debited by crediting merchandise inventory accounts as it is an asset account and it has decreased.
2.
Sold, $5,000 of merchandise, which cost $3,000, on an assortment of bank credit cards. These cards charge a 4% fee.
Date | Account Title and Explanation | Post ref | Debit($) | Credit($) |
Cash | 4,800 | |||
Credit Card Expense | 200 | |||
Sales | 5,000 | |||
(Being sales of $5,000 is recorded payment for which is made with bank credit cards ) |
- Since payment with credit cards includes immediately recognition of cash to the company and cash is an asset account, it is debited when it is increased.
- Since payment with credit card includes some charges for the company and it is an expense account, it is debited when it is increased.
- Since sales of merchandise have been made and sales is a revenue account, it is credited when it is increased.
Date | Account Title and Explanation | Post ref | Debit($) | Credit($) |
Cost of Goods Sold | 3,000 | |||
Merchandise Inventory | 3,000 | |||
(Being cost of goods sold is recorded ) |
- Since the cost of merchandise sold is $3,000 and company is using perpetual inventory system.
- Cost of Goods Sold account is debited by crediting merchandise inventory accounts as it is an asset account and it has decreased.
Want to see more full solutions like this?
Chapter 7 Solutions
FINANCIAL & MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
- Amy is evaluating the cash flow consequences of organizing her business entity SHO as an LLC (taxed as a sole proprietorship), an S corporation, or a C corporation. She used the following assumptions to make her calculations: a) For all entity types, the business reports $22,000 of business income before deducting compensation paid to Amy and payroll taxes SHO pays on Amy's behalf. b) All entities use the cash method of accounting. c) If Amy organizes SHO as an S corporation or a C corporation, SHO will pay Amy a $5,000 annual salary (assume the salary is reasonable for purposes of this problem). For both the S and C corporations, Amy will pay 7.65 percent FICA tax on her salary and SHO will also pay 7.65 percent FICA tax on Amy's salary (the FICA tax paid by the entity is deductible by the entity). d) Amy's marginal ordinary income tax rate is 35 percent, and her income tax rate on qualified dividends and net capital gains is 15 percent. e) Amy's marginal self-employment tax rate is…arrow_forwardInformation pertaining to Noskey Corporation’s sales revenue follows: November 20X1 (Actual) December 20X1 (Budgeted) January 20X2 (Budgeted)Cash sales $ 115,000 $ 121,000 $ 74,000Credit sales 282,000 409,000 208,000Total sales $ 397,000 $ 530,000 $ 282,000Management estimates 5% of credit sales to be uncollectible. Of collectible credit sales, 60% is collected in the month of sale and the remainder in the month following the month of sale. Purchases of inventory each month include 70% of the next month’s projected total sales (stated at cost) plus 30% of projected sales for the current month (stated at cost). All inventory purchases are on account; 25% is paid in the month of purchase, and the remainder is paid in…arrow_forwardMirror Image Distribution Company expects its September sales to be 20% higher than its August sales of $163,000. Purchases were $113,000 in August and are expected to be $133,000 in September. All sales are on credit and are expected to be collected as follows: 40% in the month of the sale and 60% in the following month. Purchases are paid 20% in the month of purchase and 80% in the following month. The cash balance on September 1 is $23,000. The ending cash balance on September 30 is estimated to be:arrow_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