FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING: TOOLS WP ACCESS
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING: TOOLS WP ACCESS
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781119230069
Author: Kimmel
Publisher: WILEY
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Chapter 13, Problem 13.3BE
To determine

First-in First-Out method (FIFO)

In First-in-First-Out method, the cost of initial purchased items is sold first. The ending inventory values are those items that include recent purchased items.

In Last-in-First-Out method, the cost of last purchased items is sold first. The value of the closing stock consists of the initial purchased items.

To report

The change incurred due to change of inventory method.

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The management of Jones Company has asked its accounting department to describe the effect upon the company’s financial position and its income statements of accounting for inventories on the LIFO rather than the FIFO basis during 2017 and 2018. The accounting department is to assume that the change to LIFO would have been effective on January 1, 2017, and that the initial LIFO base would have been the inventory value on December 31, 2016. The following are the company’s financial statements and other data for the years 2017 and 2018 when the FIFO method was employed.     Financial Position as of     12/31/16   12/31/17   12/31/18 Cash   $ 91,300   $132,000   $152,600 Accounts receivable   81,100   101,700   123,000 Inventory   123,000   139,300   178,000 Other assets   158,300   173,400   201,900    Total assets   $453,700   $546,400   $655,500 Accounts payable   $ 39,900   $ 61,000   $ 81,100 Other liabilities   69,800   81,600   113,500 Common stock…
During 2014, Vanguard, Ic., changed to the LIFO method of accounting for inventory. Suppose that during 2013, Vanguard changed back to the FIFO method and the following year Vanguard switches back to LIFO again. Requirements 1. What would you think of a company's ethics if it changed accounting methods every year? 2. What accounting principle would changing methods every year violate? 3. Who can be harmed when a company changes its accounting methods too often? How?
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