Financial Accounting: Tools For Business Decisionmaking, Eighth Edition Wileyplus Blackboard Card
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Chapter 8, Problem 8.4BE
To determine

Accounts receivable

Accounts receivable refers to the amounts to be received within a short period from customers upon the sale of goods and services on account. In other words, accounts receivable are amounts customers owe to the business. Accounts receivable is an asset of a business.

Allowance method:

It is a method for accounting bad debt expense, where uncollectible accounts receivables are estimated and recorded at the end of particular period. Under this method, bad debts expenses are estimated and recorded prior to the occurrence of actual bad debt, in compliance with matching principle by using the allowance for doubtful account.

Write-off:

Write-off refers to deduction of a certain amount from accounts receivable, when it becomes uncollectible.

To Journalize: The adjusting entry for recording the collection of cash from an account, which is previously written off as uncollectible.

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Johnson Hardware Supply, Inc., sells on account. When a customer account becomes four months old, Johnson Hardware Supply converts the account to a note receivable. During 2018, Johnson Hardware Supply completed these transactions: A (Click the icon to view the transactions.) Requirement 1. Record the transactions in Johnson Hardware Supply, Inc.'s journal. (Record debits first, then credits. Exclude explanations from any journal entries.) Record the sales on account. Journal Entry Date Accounts Debit Credit Apr 29 More Info Record the receipt of the note. 29 Sold goods on account to Parkview Corp., $24,000. Ignore cost of goods sold. 1 Received a $24,000, 60-day, 9% note from Parkview Corp., in satisfaction of its past-due account receivable. 31 Collected the Parkview Corp., note at maturity. Use 360-day year for interest computation and round to the nearest dollar. Journal Entry Apr Date Accounts Debit Credit Sep Sep Oct Record the collection of the Parkview Corp. note. Print Done…
Blossom Co. uses the gross method to record sales made on credit. On June 1, 2025, it made sales of $62,000 with terms 3/15, n/45. On June 12, 2025, Blossom received full payment for the June 1 sale. Prepare the required journal entries for Blossom Co. (If no entry is required, select "No Entry" for the account titles and enter o for the amounts. Credit account titles are automatically indented when the amount is entered. Do not indent manually. List all debit entries before credit entries. Record journal entries in the order presented in the problem.) Date Account Titles and Explanation Debit 10 Credit
On January 1, 2020, the records of ABC Company showed a debit balance of P650,000 in its Accounts Receivable account. The following summary transactions that occurred during 2020 were also shown under the said account: Debits:Charge sales, P6,300,000Shareholders’ subscriptions, P200,000Deposit on contract, P120,000Claims against common carrier for shipping damages, P100,000IOUs from employees, P10,000Cash advances to affiliates, P150,000Advances to a supplier, P30,000Credits:Collections from customers, P5,300,000Write-off, P35,000Merchandise returns, P45,000Allowances to customers for shipping damages, P25,000Collections on carrier claims, P40,000Collections on subscriptions, P50,000Required:a. Determine the correct amount of accounts receivable.b. Compute the amount to be presented as “trade and other receivables” under current assets.

Chapter 8 Solutions

Financial Accounting: Tools For Business Decisionmaking, Eighth Edition Wileyplus Blackboard Card

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