7th Canadian Edition by Libby, Hodge,
Kanaan, Sterling Chapters 1 - 13, Complete
1-1
,TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
Financial Statements and Business Decisions
CHAPTER TWO
Investing and Financing Decisions and the Accounting System
CHAPTER THREE
Operating Decisions and the Accounting System
CHAPTER FOUR
Adjustments, Financial Statements, and the Closing Process
CHAPTER FIVE
Reporting and Interpreting Sales Revenue, Receivables, and Cash
CHAPTER SIX
Reporting and Interpreting Cost of Sales and Inventory
CHAPTER SEVEN
Reporting and Interpreting Long-Lived Assets
CHAPTER EIGHT
Reporting and Interpreting Current Liabilities
CHAPTER NINE
Reporting and Interpreting Non-current Liabilities
CHAPTER TEN
Reporting and Interpreting Shareholders' Equity
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Statement of Cash Flows
CHAPTER TWELVE
Communicating Accounting Information and Analyzing Financial Statements
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Reporting and Interpreting Investments in Other Corporations
1-2
,CHAPTER ONE
Financial Statements and Business Decisions
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS
1. Accounting is a system that collects and processes (analyzes, measures, and
records) financial information about an organization and reports that information to
decision makers.
2. Financial accounting involves preparation of the four basic financial statements and
related disclosures for external decision makers. Managerial accounting involves
the preparation of detailed plans, budgets, forecasts, and performance reports for
internal decision makers.
3. Financial reports are used by both internal and external groups and individuals. The
internal groups are comprised of the various managers of the entity. The external
groups include the owners, investors, creditors, governmental agencies, other
interested parties, and the public at large.
4. Investors purchase all or part of a business and hope to gain by receiving part of
what the company earns and/or selling the company in the future at a higher price
than they paid. Creditors lend money to a company for a specific length of time and
hope to gain by charging interest on the loan.
5. In fa fsociety feach forganization fcan fbe fdefined fas fa fseparate faccounting fentity.
fAn faccounting fentity fis fthe forganization ffor fwhich ffinancial fdata fare fto fbe
fcollected. fTypical faccounting fentities fare fa fbusiness, fa fchurch, fa fgovernmental
funit, fa funiversity fand fother fnonprofit forganizations fsuch fas fa fhospital fand fa
fwelfare forganization. fA fbusiness ftypically fis fdefined fand ftreated fas fa fseparate
f entity fbecause fthe fowners, fcreditors, finvestors, fand fother finterested fparties
fneed fto fevaluate fits fperformance fand fits fpotential fseparately ffrom fother fentities
fand ffrom fitsfowners.
1-3
, 6. Name fof fStatement Alternative fTitle
(a) Income fStatement (a) f Statement fof fEarnings; fStatement fof
Income; fStatement fof fOperations
(b) Balance fSheet (b) f Statement fof fFinancial fPosition
(c) Audit fReport (c) f Report fof fIndependent fAccountants
1-4