Ann M. Martin Company makes the following errors during the current year.

(Evaluate each case independently and assume ending inventory in the following year is correctly stated.)

1. Ending inventory is overstated, but purchases and related accounts payable are recorded correctly.

2. Both ending inventory and purchases and related accounts payable are understated. (Assume this purchase was recordedand paid for in the following year.)

3. Ending inventory is correct, but a purchase on account was not recorded. (Assume this purchase was recorded and paidfor in the following year.)

Instructions

Indicate the effect of each of these errors on working capital, current ratio (assume that the current ratio is greater than 1), retained earnings, and net income for the current year and the subsequent year.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Purchases have a negative relation with net income, retained earnings, working capital, and current ratio. In contrast, the ending inventory has a positive relation.

Step by step solution

01

Ending Inventory is overstated

As the ending inventory is overstated, the current ratio value and working capital would for the current year also be overstated. Because ending inventory is a part of current assets.

For the current year, the value of COGS would be understated, due to which the net income would be overstated retained earnings would also be higher.

In the subsequent year, opening inventory would be overstated, overestimating the COGS value, and the net income and retained earnings would be lower. There would be no effect on the current ratio and working capital in the subsequent year.

02

Both Ending inventory and purchases are understated

Ending inventory and purchase would have different effects. Understand purchase would overstate the net income and understated inventory would underestimate the net income. So the variable having a higher degree of error would have a relevant effect on net income and retained earnings.

Working capital and current ratio would be overestimated as the accounts payable are understated.

03

Purchases are unrecorded

Unrecorded purchases would lower the COGS value. As a result, the net income would be overestimated and the retained earnings would also overstate.

The unrecorded purchase would have understated accounts payable. So the working capital and current ratio would be overestimated as current liabilities would be lower.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Presented below is information related to Blowfish radios for the Hootie Company for the month of July.

Units Unit Total Units Selling Total

InCostSoldPrice

Date Transaction

July 1 Balance 100 \(4.10 \) 410

6 Purchase 800 4.20 3,360

7 Sale 300\(7.00 \) 2,100

10 Sale 300 7.30 2,190

12 Purchase 400 4.50 1,800

15 Sale 200 7.40 1,480

18 Purchase 300 4.60 1,380

22 Sale 400 7.40 2,960

25 Purchase 500 4.58 2,290

30 Sale 200 7.50 1,500

Totals 2,100\(9,240 1,400\)10,230

Instructions

(a) Assuming that the periodic inventory method is used, compute the inventory cost at July 31 under each of the following cost flow assumptions.

(1) FIFO.

(2) LIFO.

(3) Weighted-average.

(b) Answer the following questions.

(1) Which of the methods used above will yield the lowest figure for gross profit for the income statement? Explain why.

(2) Which of the methods used above will yield the lowest figure for ending inventory for the balance sheet? Explain why.

What is the dollar-value method of LIFO inventory valuation? What advantage does the dollar-value method have over the specific goods approach of LIFO inventory valuation? Why will the traditional LIFO inventory costing method and the dollar-value LIFO inventory costing method produce different inventory valuations if the composition of the inventory base changes?

As compared with the FIFO method of costing inventories, does the LIFO method result in a larger or smaller net income in a period of rising prices? What is the comparative effect on net income in a period of falling prices?

Explain the following terms.

(a) LIFO layer.

(b) LIFO reserve.

(c) LIFO effect.

Question: In January 2017, Susquehanna Inc. requested and secured permission from the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service to compute inventories under the last-in, first-out (LIFO) method and elected to determine inventory cost under the dollar-value LIFO method. Susquehanna Inc. satisfied the commissioner that cost could be accurately determined by use of an index number computed from a representative sample selected from the company’s single inventory pool.

Instructions

(a) Why should inventories be included in (1) a balance sheet and (2) the computation of net income?

(b) The Internal Revenue Code allows some accountable events to be considered differently for income tax reporting purposes and financial accounting purposes, while other accountable events must be reported the same for both purposes. Discuss why it might be desirable to report some accountable events differently for financial accounting purposes than for income tax reporting purposes.

(c) Discuss the ways and conditions under which the FIFO and LIFO inventory costing methods produce different inventory valuations. Do not discuss procedures for computing inventory cost.

See all solutions

Recommended explanations on Business Studies Textbooks

View all explanations

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free