Mock Exam Final
Mock Exam Final
Mock Exam Final
11. The financial statement that presents a summary of the revenues and expenses of a
business for a specific period of time, such as a month or year, is called a(n)
a. prior period statement
b. statement of owner's equity
c. income statement
d. balance sheet
14. The asset created by a business when it makes a sale on account is termed
a. accounts payable
b. prepaid expense
c. unearned revenue
d. accounts receivable
15. The debt created by a business when it makes a purchase on account is referred to as
an
a. account payable
b. account receivable
c. asset
d. expense payable
16. If total assets decreased by $47,000 during a period of time and owner's equity
increased by $24,000 during the same period, then the amount and direction (increase
or decrease) of the period's change in total liabilities is
a. $23,000 increase
b. $47,000 decrease
c. $71,000 decrease
d. $71,000 increase
18. How does the rendering of services on account affect the accounting equation?
a. assets increase; owner’s equity increases
b. assets decrease; owner's equity decrease
c. assets increase; owner's equity decreases
d. liabilities increase; owner's equity decreases
19. How does paying a liability in cash affect the accounting equation?
a. assets increase; liabilities decrease
b. assets increase; liabilities increase
c. assets decrease; liabilities decrease
d. liabilities decrease; owner's equity increases
20. How does receiving a bill to be paid next month for services rendered affect the
accounting equation?
a. assets decrease; owner's equity decreases
b. assets increase; liabilities increase
c. liabilities increase; owner's equity increases
d. liabilities increase; owner's equity decreases
21. How does the collection of cash from a customer who was previously put on account
affect the accounting equation?
a. assets decrease; owner's equity decreases
b. assets increase; owner's equity increases
c. assets increase; assets decrease
d. assets increase; liabilities increase
22. Land, originally purchased for $20,000, is sold for $75,000 in cash. What is the effect
of the sale on the accounting equation?
a. assets increase $75,000; owner's equity increases $75,000
b. assets increase $55,000; owner's equity increases $55,000
c. assets increase $75,000; liabilities decrease $20,000; owner's equity increases
$55,000
d. assets increase $20,000; no change for liabilities; owner's equity increases $75,000
23. The Melville Company sold land for $60,000 in cash. The land was originally
purchased for $40,000, and at the time of the sale, $15,000 was still owed to First
National Bank on that purchase. After the sale, The Melville Company paid off the
loan to First National Bank. What is the effect of the sale and the payoff of the loan
on the accounting equation?
a. assets increase $20,000; liabilities decrease $15,000; owner's equity increases
$5,000
b. assets increase $5,000; liabilities decrease $15,000; owner's equity increases
$20,000
c. assets increase $60,000; liabilities decrease $15,000; owner's equity increases
$20,000
d. assets increase $20,000; liabilities decrease $15,000; owner's equity increases
$35,000
24. On November 1 of the current year, the assets and liabilities of Jim Chu, M.D., are as
follows: Cash, $10,000; Accounts Receivable, $8,200; Supplies, $1,050; Land,
$25,000; Accounts Payable, $6,530. What is the amount of owner's equity (Jim Chu's
capital) as of November 1 of the current year?
a. $37,720
b. $44,430
c. $21,500
d. $50,780
25. Al Shea is the sole owner and operator of SawTooth Company. As of the end of its
accounting period, December 31, 2005, SawTooth Company has assets of $925,000
and liabilities of $285,000. During 2006, Al Shea invested an additional $50,000 and
withdrew $30,000 from the business. What is the amount of net income during 2006,
assuming that as of December 31, 2006, assets were $980,000, and liabilities were
$255,000?
a. $ 95,000
b. $ 65,000
c. $165,000
d. $725,000
26. The total assets and the total liabilities of a business at the beginning and at the end of
the year appear below. During the year, the owner had withdrawn $50,000 for
personal use and had made an additional investment of $35,000 in the business.
Assets Liabilities
Beginning of year $295,000 $190,000
End of year 355,000 220,000
29. Which of the following groups of accounts have a normal debit balance?
a. revenues, liabilities, capital
b. capital, assets
c. liabilities, expenses
d. assets, expenses
30. Which one of the statements below is not a purpose for the journal?
a. to show increases and decreases in accounts
b. to show a chronological order by date
c. to show a complete transaction in one place
d. to help locate errors
32. Which of the following applications of the rules of debit and credit is true?
a. decrease Prepaid Insurance with a credit and the normal balance is a credit
b. increase Accounts Payable with a credit and the normal balance is a debit
c. increase Supplies Expense with a debit and the normal balance is a debit
d. decrease Cash with a debit and the normal balance is a credit
33. The classification and normal balance of the accounts payable account is
a. an asset with a credit balance
b. a liability with a credit balance
c. owner's equity with a credit balance
d. revenue with a credit balance
34. In which of the following types of accounts are decreases recorded by debits?
a. assets
b. revenues
c. expenses
d. drawing
35. A credit balance in which of the following accounts would indicate a likely error?
a. Fees Earned
b. Salary Expense
c. Peter Penn, Capital
d. Accounts Payable
36. Randomly listed below are the steps in the accounting cycle:
37. Office supplies purchased by J's Appliance Repair on account were returned. Which
of the following entries for J's Appliance Repair records this transaction?
a. Cash, debit; Office Supplies, credit
b. Office Supplies, debit; Accounts Receivable, credit
c. Accounts Payable, debit; Office Supplies, credit
d. Office Supplies, debit; Accounts Payable, credit
38. Cash was paid by J's Appliance Repair to creditors on account. Which of the
following entries for J's records this transaction?
a. Cash, debit; J's, Capital, credit
b. Accounts Payable, debit; Cash, credit
c. Accounts Receivable, debit; Cash, credit
d. Accounts Payable, debit; Account Receivable, credit
40. Which of the following entries records the acquisition of office supplies on account?
a. Office Supplies, debit; Cash, credit
b. Cash, debit; Office Supplies, credit
c. Office Supplies, debit; Accounts Payable, credit
d. Accounts Receivable, debit; Office Supplies, credit
44. Using accrual accounting, expenses are recorded and reported only
a. when they are incurred, whether or not cash is paid
b. when they are incurred and paid at the same time
c. if they are paid before they are incurred
d. if they are paid after they are incurred
45. One of the accounting concepts upon which deferrals and accruals are based is
a. matching
b. Cost
c. price-level adjustment
d. conservatism
46. If the effect of the debit portion of an adjusting entry is to increase the balance of an
expense account, which of the following describes the effect of the credit portion of
the entry?
a. decreases the balance of an owner's equity account
b. increases the balance of an liability account
c. increases the balance of an asset account
d. decreases the balance of an expense account
47. If the effect of the credit portion of an adjusting entry is to increase the balance of a
liability account, which of the following describes the effect of the debit portion of the
entry?
a. increases the balance of a contra asset account
b. increases the balance of an asset account
c. decreases the balance of an owner's equity account
d. increases the balance of an expense account
48. The primary difference between deferred and accrued expenses is that deferred
expenses have
a. been incurred and accrued expenses have not
b. not been incurred and accrued expenses have been incurred
c. been recorded and accrued expenses have not been incurred
d. not been recorded and accrued expenses have been incurred
53. Which one of the accounts below would likely be included in an accrual adjusting
entry?
a. Insurance Expense
b. Prepaid Rent
c. Interest Expense
d. Unearned Rent
54. Which one of the following accounts below would likely be included in a deferral
adjusting entry?
a. Interest Revenue
b. Unearned Revenue
c. Salaries Payable
d. Accounts Receivable
55. The balance in the prepaid rent account before adjustment at the end of the year is
$15,000, which represents three months' rent paid on December 1. The adjusting
entry required on December 31 is
a. debit Rent Expense, $5,000; credit Prepaid Rent, $5,000
b. debit Prepaid Rent, $10,000; credit Rent Expense, $5,000
c. debit Rent Expense, $10,000; credit Prepaid Rent, $5,000
d. debit Prepaid Rent, $5,000; credit Rent Expense, $5,000
56. The balance in the office supplies account on June 1 was $5,200, supplies purchased
during June were $2,500, and the supplies on hand at June 30 were $2,000. The
amount to be used for the appropriate adjusting entry is
a. $4,500
b. $2,500
c. $9,700
d. $5,700
57. What is the proper adjusting entry at June 30, the end of the fiscal year, based on a
prepaid insurance account balance before adjustment, $15,500, and unexpired
amounts per analysis of policies, $4,500?
a. debit Insurance Expense, $4,500; credit Prepaid Insurance, $4,500
b. debit Insurance Expense, $15,500; credit Prepaid Insurance, $15,500
c. debit Prepaid Insurance, $11,500; credit Insurance Expense, $11,500
d. debit Insurance Expense, $11,000; credit Prepaid Insurance, $11,000
58. The entry to adjust for the cost of supplies used during the accounting period is
a. Supplies Expense, debit; Supplies, credit
b. James Smith, Capital, debit; Supplies, credit
c. Accounts Payable, debit; Supplies, credit
d. Supplies, debit; credit James Smith, Capital
59. A business pays weekly salaries of $20,000 on Friday for a five-day week ending on
that day. The adjusting entry necessary at the end of the fiscal period ending on
Thursday is
a. debit Salaries Payable, $16,000; credit Cash, $16,000
b. debit Salary Expense, $16,000; credit Drawing, $16,000
c. debit Salary Expense, $16,000; credit Salaries Payable, $16,000
d. debit Drawing, $16,000; credit Cash, $16,000
63. Data for an adjusting entry described as "accrued wages, $2,020" means to debit
a. Wages Expense and credit Wages Payable
b. Wages Payable and credit Wages Expense
c. Accounts Receivable and credit Wages Expense
d. Drawing and credit Wages Payable
a. 3.3
b. 8.3
c. 3.7
d. 3.0
93. Once inventory is excessive which item below is not true?
a. reduce solvency
b. increase taxes
c. increase ordering costs
d. increase storage costs
94. In order to be useful to managers, management accounting reports should possess all
of the following characteristics EXCEPT:
a. provide objective measures of past operations and subjective estimates about
future decisions
b. be prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles
c. be provided at any time management needs information
d. be prepared to report information for any unit of the business to support decision
making
95. What is the primary criterion for the preparation of managerial accounting reports?
a. Relevance of the reports
b. Meet the manager needs
c. Timing of the reports
d. Cost of the reports
96. Which of the following is most associated with managerial accounting?
a. Must follow GAAP
b. May rely on estimates and forecasts
c. Is prepared for users outside the organization.
d. Always reports on the entire entity
97. Compute conversion costs given the following data: Direct Materials, $352,700;
Direct Labor, $196,300; Factory Overhead, $177,600.
a. $549,000
b. $726,600
c. $373,900
d. $530,300
98. Which of the following is false in regards to direct materials for an auto
manufacturer?
a. Steel would probably be a direct material.
b. Upholstery fabric would probably be a direct material
c. Oil to lubricate factory machines would not be a direct material.
d. Small plastic clips to hold on door panels, because they become part of the auto,
must be accounted for as direct materials.
99. The cost of a manufactured product generally consists of which of the following
costs?
a. Direct materials cost and factory overhead cost
b. Direct labor cost and factory overhead cost
c. Direct labor cost, direct materials cost, and factory overhead cost
d. Direct materials cost and direct labor cost
100. The cost of materials entering directly into the manufacturing process is classified as:
a. direct labor cost
b. factory overhead cost
c. burden cost
d. direct materials cost
101. Which of the following is an example of direct materials cost for an automobile
manufacturer?
a. Cost of oil lubricants for factory machinery
b. Cost of wages of assembly worker
c. Salary of production supervisor
d. Cost of interior upholstery
102. If the cost of direct materials is a small portion of total production cost, it may be
classified as part of:
a. direct labor cost
b. selling and administrative costs
c. miscellaneous costs
d. factory overhead cost
103. Which of the following is an example of direct labor cost for an airplane
manufacturer?
a. Cost of oil lubricants for factory machinery
b. Cost of wages of assembly worker
c. Salary of plant supervisor
d. Cost of jet engines
104. Costs other than direct materials cost and direct labor cost incurred in the
manufacturing process are classified as:
a. factory overhead cost
b. miscellaneous expense
c. product costs
d. other manufacturing costs
105. Which of the following is an example of a factory overhead cost?
a. Repair and maintenance cost on the administrative building
b. Factory heating and lighting cost
c. Insurance premiums on salespersons' automobiles
d. President's salary
106. The three most common cost behavior classifications are:
a. variable costs, product costs, and sunk costs
b. fixed costs, variable costs, and mixed costs
c. variable costs, period costs, and differential costs
d. variable costs, sunk costs, and opportunity costs
107. Which of the following costs is an example of a cost that remains the same in total as
the number of units produced changes?
a. Direct labor
b. Salary of a factory supervisor
c. Units of production depreciation on factory equipment
d. Direct materials
108. For purposes of analysis, mixed costs are generally:
a. classified as fixed costs
b. classified as variable costs
c. classified as period costs
d. separated into their variable and fixed cost components
109. If sales are $820,000, variable costs are 62% of sales, and operating income is
$260,000, what is the contribution margin ratio?
a. 53.1%
b. 38%
c. 62%
d. 32%
110. A firm operated at 80% of capacity for the past year, during which fixed costs were
$210,000, variable costs were 65% of sales, and sales were $1,000,000. Operating
profit was:
a. $140,000
b. $150,000
c. $310,000
d. $200,000
111. If sales are $425,000, variable costs are 63% of sales, and operating income is
$50,000, what is the contribution margin ratio?
a. 37%
b. 26.8%
c. 11.8%
d. 63%
112. If fixed costs are $750,000 and variable costs are 70% of sales, what is the break-even
point (dollars)?
a. $1,071,429
b. $525,000
c. $2,500,000
d. $1,275,000
113. If fixed costs are $250,000, the unit selling price is $105, and the unit variable costs
are $65, what is the break-even sales (units)?
a. 3,846 units
b. 2,381 units
c. 10,000 units
d. 6,250 units
114. If fixed costs are $1,400,000, the unit selling price is $220, and the unit variable costs
are $120, what is the amount of sales required to realize an operating income of
$200,000?
a. 14,000 units
b. 12,000 units
c. 16,000 units
d. 13,333 units
115. If fixed costs are $300,000, the unit selling price is $25, and the unit variable costs are
$20, what is the break-even sales (units) if fixed costs are reduced by $40,000?
a. 60,000 units
b. 52,000 units
c. 62,000 units
d. 64,000 units
116. If fixed costs are $450,000, the unit selling price is $75, and the unit variable costs are
$50, what are the old and new break-even sales (units) if the unit selling price
increases by $5?
a. 6,000 units and 5,250 units
b. 18,000 units and 6,000 units
c. 18,000 units and 15,000 units
d. 9,000 units and 15,000 units
117. Morino Corporation sells product W for $125 per unit, the variable cost per unit is
$90, the fixed costs are $450,000, and Morino is in the 30% corporate tax bracket.
What are the sales (dollars) required to earn a net income (after tax) of $25,000?
a. $1,249,020
b. $674,625
c. $1,734,693
d. $1,904,750
118. Scher Corporation sells product G for $150 per unit, the variable cost per unit is $105,
the fixed costs are $720,000, and Scher is in the 25% corporate tax bracket. What are
the sales (dollars) required to earn a net income (after tax) of $40,000?
a. $2,533,350
b. $2,577,777
c. $2,933,400
d. $2,400,000
119. If variable costs per unit increased because of an increase in hourly wage rates, the
break-even point would:
a. decrease
b. increase
c. remain the same
d. increase or decrease, depending upon the percentage increase in wage rates
120. If variable costs per unit decreased because of a decrease in utility rates, the break-
even point would:
a. decrease
b. increase
c. remain the same
d. increase or decrease, depending upon the percentage increase in utility rates
121. If fixed costs increased and variable costs per unit decreased, the break-even point
would:
a. increase
b. decrease
c. remain the same
d. increase, decrease, or remain the same, depending upon the amounts of increase in
fixed cost and decrease in variable cost
122. Which of the following conditions would cause the break-even point to decrease?
a. Total fixed costs increase
b. Unit selling price decreases
c. Unit variable cost decreases
d. Unit variable cost increases
123. Which of the following conditions would cause the break-even point to increase?
a. Total fixed costs decrease
b. Unit selling price increases
c. Unit variable cost decreases
d. Unit variable cost increases
124. Which of the following conditions would cause the break-even point to increase?
a. Total fixed costs increase
b. Unit selling price increases
c. Unit variable cost decreases
d. Total fixed costs decrease
125. Cialini Co. has budgeted salary increases to factory supervisors totaling 10%. If
selling prices and all other cost relationships are held constant, next year's break-even
point will:
a. decrease by 10%
b. increase by 10%
c. not be determined from the data given
d. increase at a rate greater than 10%
126. The benefits of comparing actual performance of the operations against planned goals
include all of the following except:
a. providing prompt feedback to employees about their performance relative to the
goal
b. preventing unplanned expenditures
c. helping to establish spending priorities
d. determining how managers are performing against prior years' actual operating
results
127. Budgeting supports the planning process by encouraging all of the following activities
except:
a. requiring all organizational units to establish their goals for the upcoming period
b. increasing the motivation of managers and employees by providing agreed-upon
expectations
c. directing and coordinating operations during the period
d. improving overall decision making by considering all viewpoints, options, and cost
reduction possibilities
128. For February, sales revenue is $700,000; sales commissions are 5% of sales; the sales
manager's salary is $96,000; advertising expenses are $80,000; shipping expenses
total 2% of sales; and miscellaneous selling expenses are $2,100 plus 1/2 of 1% of
sales. Total selling expenses for the month of February are:
a. $185,650
b. $189,500
c. $196,100
d. $230,600
129. The first budget customarily prepared as part of an entity's master budget is the:
a. production budget
b. cash budget
c. sales budget
d. direct materials purchases
130. If the expected sales volume for the current period is 7,000 units, the desired ending
inventory is 200 units, and the beginning inventory is 300 units, the number of units
set forth in the purchase budget, representing total purchase for the current period, is:
a. 7,000
b. 6,900
c. 7,100
d. 7,200
131. Wright Corporation began its operations on September 1 of the current year.
Budgeted sales for the first three months of business are $240,000, $300,000, and
$420,000, respectively, for September, October, and November. The company
expects to sell 20% of its merchandise for cash. Of sales on account, 70% are
expected to be collected in the month of the sale, 25% in the month following the sale,
and the remainder in the following month. The cash collections in September from
accounts receivable are:
a. $240,000
b. $134,400
c. $192,000
d. $168,000
132. Which of the following conditions normally would not indicate that standard costs
should be revised?
a. The engineering department has revised product specifications in responding to
customer suggestions.
b. The company has signed a new union contract which increases the factory wages
on average by $2.00 an hour.
c. Actual costs differed from standard costs for the preceding week.
d. The world price of raw materials increased.
133. Standards that represent levels of operation that can be attained with reasonable effort
are called:
a. theoretical standards
b. ideal standards
c. variable standards
d. normal standards
134. Which of the following conditions normally would not indicate that standard costs
should be revised?
a. The engineering department has revised product specifications in responding to
customer suggestions.
b. The company has signed a new union contract which increases the factory wages
on average by $2.00 an hour.
c. Actual costs differed from standard costs for the preceding week.
d. The world price of raw materials increased.
135. Standards that represent levels of operation that can be attained with reasonable effort
are called:
a. theoretical standards
b. ideal standards
c. variable standards
d. normal standards
136. The standard price and quantity of direct materials are separated because:
a. GAAP reporting requires this separation
b. direct materials prices are controlled by the purchasing department, and quantity
used is controlled by the production department
c. standard quantities are more difficult to estimate than standard prices
d. standard prices change more frequently than standard quantities
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137. The following data relate to direct materials costs for November: