100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Solution Manual Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making 10th Edition 2026 – Kimmel, Weygandt & Mitchell A+ | ISBN 9781119791089

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
611
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
20-03-2025
Written in
2024/2025

Complete 2026 solution manual for Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making (10th Edition) by Kimmel, Weygandt & Mitchell. Covers all chapters with detailed solutions — ideal for accounting students, business majors, and financial analysis practice.

Show more Read less
Institution
Finance Accounting Study
Course
Finance Accounting study











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Finance Accounting study
Course
Finance Accounting study

Document information

Uploaded on
March 20, 2025
Number of pages
611
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

  • verified a

Content preview

CHAPTER 1
Introduction to Financial Statements

Learning Objectives

1. Identify the forms of business organization and the uses of accounting information.
2. Explain the three principal types of business activity.
3. Describe the four financial statements and how they are prepared.
*4. Explain the career opportunities in accounting.




ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS

1. The three basic forms of business organizations are (1) sole proprietorship, (2) partnership, and
(3) corporation.

LO 1 BT: K Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA BC: Governance Perspective

2. Advantages of a corporation are limited liability (stockholders not being personally liable for cor-
porate debts), easy transferability of ownership, and ease of raising funds. Disadvantages of a
corporation are increased taxation and government regulations.

LO 1 BT: K Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA BC: Governance Perspective

3. Proprietorships and partnerships receive favorable tax treatment compared to corporations and are
easier to form than corporations. They are also owner controlled. Disadvantages of proprietorships
and partnerships are unlimited liability (proprietors/partners are personally liable for all debts) and
difficulty in obtaining financing compared to corporations.

LO 1 BT: K Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA BC: Governance Perspective

4. Yes. Companies can choose one of the hybrid business forms, limited liability corporations
(LLCs) or subchapter S corporations, which combine the tax advantages of partnerships with the
limited liability of corporations.

LO 1 BT: K Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA BC: Governance Perspective

5. Yes. A person cannot earn a living, spend money, buy on credit, make an investment, or pay
taxes without receiving, using, or dispensing financial information. Accounting provides financial
information to interested users through the preparation and distribution of financial statements.

LO 1 BT: C Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA AC: Reporting

6. Internal users are managers who plan, organize, and run a business. To assist management,
accounting provides timely internal reports. Examples include financial comparisons of operating

Copyright © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Solutions Manual (For Instructor Use Only) 1

, alternatives, projections of income from new sales campaigns, forecasts of cash needs for the
next year, and financial statements.

LO 1 BT: C Difficulty: E TOT: 1 min. AACSB: Knowledge AICPA AC: Reporting

7. External u users u are u those u outside u the u business u who u have u either u a u present u or
u potential u direct u financial uinterest u (investors uand u creditors) uor uan u indirect ufinancial
uinterest u(taxing uauthorities, uregu- u latory uagencies, ulabor uunions, ucustomers, uand
ueconomic uplanners).

LO u1 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

8. u The u four u most u common u types u of u data u analytics u and u the u basic u question u each
u addresses u are: u Descriptive u (What u happened?), u Diagnostic u (Why u did u it u happen?),
u Predictive u (What u is u likely u to u happen?), uand uPrescriptive u(What ushould uwe udo uabout
uit?).

LO u1 u u BT: u K u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u 2 umin. u u AACSB: u nowledge u u AICPA u u AC: u Measurement uAnalysis uand
uInterpretation



Questions uChapter u1 u(Continued)

9. u The u three u types u of u business u activities u are u financing u activities, u investing u activities, u and
u operating activities. u Financing u activities u include u borrowing u money u and u selling
u
u shares u of u stock. u Investing u activities u include u the u purchase u and u sale u of u property,
u plant, u and u equipment. u Operating u activities u include uselling ugoods, uperforming uservices,
uand upurchasing uinventory.


LO u2 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uM u uTOT: u2 umin. u u AACSB: uKnowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

10. u Income ustatement. (d) Balance usheet.
u (a) (b) Balance usheet. (e) Balance usheet.
(c) Income ustatement. (f) Balance usheet.

LO u3 u uBT: u K u uDifficulty: uM u uTOT: u2 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

11. When u a u company u pays u dividends, u it u reduces u the u amount u of u assets u available u to
u pay u creditors. u Therefore, u banks u and u other u creditors u monitor u dividend u payments u to
u ensure u they u do u not u put u a u company’s uability uto umake udebt upayments uat urisk.


LO u3 u u BT: u C u uDifficulty: uM u u TOT: u2 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uMeasurement u Anallysis uand
uInterpretation


12. Yes. u Net u income u does u appear u on u the u income u statement—it u is u the u result u of
u subtracting u expenses u from urevenues. uIn uaddition, unet u income u appears uin uthe uretained
u earnings u statement—it u is ushown u as u an uaddition u to u the ubeginning-of-period u retained
u earnings. uIndirectly, u the u net u income u of u a u company u is ualso uincluded u in uthe ubalance
usheet. uIt u is uincluded uin uthe uretained uearnings uaccount uwhich uappears u in uthe
ustockholders’ uequity usection uof uthe ubalance usheet.


LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

13. The u primary u purpose u of u the u statement u of u cash u flows u is u to u provide u financial

2 Copyright © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Solutions Manual (For Instructor Use Only)

, u information u about u the u cash ureceipts uand ucash upayments uof ua ubusiness ufor ua uspecific
uperiod uof utime.


LO u3 u uBT: u K u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u 1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u u AICPA uAC: uReporting




Copyright © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Solutions Manual (For Instructor Use Only) 3

, 14. The u three u categories u of u the u statement u of u cash u flows u are u operating u activities,
u investing u activities, u and u financing u activities. u The u categories u were u chosen u because
u they u represent u the u three u principal u types uof ubusiness uactivities.


LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

15. Retained uearnings uis uthe unet uincome uretained uin ua ucorporation. uRetained uearnings uis
uincreased u by u net uincome uand uis udecreased uby udividends uand ua unet uloss.


LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

16. The ubasic uaccounting uequation uis uAssets u= uLiabilities u+ uStockholders’ uEquity.

LO u3 u uBT: u K u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u 1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u u AICPA uAC: uReporting

17. (a) u Assets uare uresources uowned uby ua ubusiness. uLiabilities uare uamounts uowed uto ucreditors.
uPut umore u simply, u liabilities uare u existing u debts uand uobligations. u Stockholders’ uequity uis
uthe u ownership u claim u on unet uassets.


(b) The u u items u u that u u affect u u stockholders’ u u equity u u are u u issuance u u of u u common
u u stock u u and u u the u components uof u retained uearnings u (dividends, u revenues, uand
uexpenses).


LO u3 u uBT: u K u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u 2 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u u AICPA uAC: uReporting

18. The uliabilities uare u(b) uAccounts upayable uand u(g) uSalaries uand uwages upayable.

LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

19. (a) Net u income u from u the u income u statement u is u reported u as u an u increase u to u retained
u earnings u on u the uretained uearnings ustatement.


(b) The uending uamount uon u the uretained uearnings ustatement u is u reported u as uthe
u retained u earnings u amount uon uthe ubalance usheet.


(c) The u ending u amount u on u the u statement u of u cash u flows u is u reported u as u the u cash
u amount u on u the u balance usheet.


LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uM u uTOT: u2 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

20. The u purpose u of u the u management u discussion u and u analysis u section u is u to u provide
u management’s u views uon u its u ability uto u pay ushort-term uobligations, u its uability uto ufund
u operations uand u expansion, u and u its uresults uof uoperations. uThe uMD&A usection uis ua
urequired upart uof uthe uannual ureport.


LO u3 u uBT: u K u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u 1 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u u AICPA uAC: uReporting

21. An u unqualified u opinion u shows u that, u in u the u opinion u of u an u independent u auditor, u the
u financial u state u- u ments u have u been u presented u fairly, u in u conformity u with u generally
u accepted u accounting u principles. u This u gives u investors u more u confidence u that u they u can
u rely u on u the u figures u reported u in u the u financial u statements.

LO u3 u uBT: u C u uDifficulty: uE u uTOT: u2 umin. u u AACSB: u Knowledge u uAICPA uAC: uReporting

4 Copyright © John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Solutions Manual (For Instructor Use Only)

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
Higradesstuvia Massachusetts Institute Of Technology
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
28
Member since
10 months
Number of followers
2
Documents
800
Last sold
2 weeks ago
HIGH GRADES DOCS

High Grades Docs – Your trusted source for clear, accurate, and exam-ready study materials. We provide well-structured summaries, detailed notes, practice questions, and updated guides to help you learn faster, score higher, and stay ahead in every course. Quality, clarity, and top grades — all in one place.

4.8

13 reviews

5
11
4
2
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions