Accounting, 8th Canadian Edition by
Libby, Hodge, Kanaan, Sterling Chapters
1 - 13, Complete
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,TABLE OF CONTENTS sj sj sj
CHAPTER ONE sj
Financial Statements and Business Decisions
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CHAPTER TWO sj
Investing and Financing Decisions and the Accounting System
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CHAPTER THREE sj
Operating Decisions and the Accounting System
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CHAPTER FOUR sj
Adjustments, Financial Statements, and the Closing Process
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CHAPTER FIVE sj
Reporting and Interpreting Sales Revenue, Receivables, and Cash
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CHAPTER SIX sj
Reporting and Interpreting Cost of Sales and Inventory
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CHAPTER SEVEN sj
Reporting and Interpreting Long-Lived Assets
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CHAPTER EIGHT sj
Reporting and Interpreting Current Liabilities
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CHAPTER NINE sj
Reporting and Interpreting Non-current Liabilities
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CHAPTER TEN sj
Reporting and Interpreting Shareholders' Equity
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CHAPTER ELEVEN sj
Statement of Cash Flows
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CHAPTER TWELVE sj
Communicating Accounting Information and Analyzing Financial Statements
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CHAPTER THIRTEEN sj
Reporting and Interpreting Investments in Other Corporations
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,CHAPTER ONE sj
Financial Statements and Business Decisions sj sj sj sj
ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS sj sj
1. Accounting is a system that collects and processes (analyzes, measures, and recordssj sj sj sj sj sj sj sj sj sj sj
) financial information about an organization and reports that information todecision m
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akers.
2. Financial accounting involves preparation of the four basic financial statements andrel
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ated disclosures for external decision makers. Managerial accounting involves the pre
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paration of detailed plans, budgets, forecasts, and performance reports for internal dec
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ision makers. sj
3. Financial reports are used by both internal and external groups and individuals. Theinte
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rnal groups are comprised of the various managers of the entity. The external groups in
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clude the owners, investors, creditors, governmental agencies, other interested parties
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, and the public at large.
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4. Investors purchase all or part of a business and hope to gain by receiving part of what the
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company earns and/or selling the company in the future at a higher price than they paid.
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Creditors lend money to a company for a specific length of time andhope to gain by char
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ging interest on the loan. sj sj sj sj
5. In a society each organization can be defined as a separate accounting entity. An accou
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nting entity is the organization for which financial data are to be collected. Typical accou
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nting entities are a business, a church, a governmental unit, a university and other nonp
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rofit organizations such as a hospital and a welfare organization. A business typically is
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defined and treated as a separate entity because the owners, creditors, investors, and
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other interested parties need to evaluate its performance and its potential separately fr
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om other entities and from itsowners.
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6. Name of Statement sj sj Alternative Title sj
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, (a) Income Statement
sj (a) Statement of Earnings; Statement of
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Income; Statement of Operations
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(b) Balance Sheet sj (b) Statement of Financial Position
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(c) Audit Report
sj (c) Report of Independent Accountants
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