Section 3, Chapter 5 Flashcards

1
Q

What are revenues?

A

inflows that the government demands, earns or receives from donation

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2
Q

What 2 categories are revenues classified into?

A
  1. ) exchange revenue

2. ) nonexchange revenue

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3
Q

What is exchange revenue?

A

earned revenue - arises when a government provides goods or services to the public or another entity for a price.

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4
Q

What is nonexchange revenue?

A

arises from the governments power to demand payment from the public in the form of taxes, duties, fines and penalties. Donations are also nonexchange revenue.

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5
Q

When are accounts receivable established?

A

when a federal entity has a claim to cash or other assets from entities.

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6
Q

What is a bad debt expense?

A

when credit losses are more likely than not

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7
Q

What are the three factors to consider when estimating a loss?

A
  1. ) debtors ability to pay
  2. ) debtors payment record and willingness to pay
  3. ) probable recovery of amounts from secondary sources, such as a lein
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8
Q

What are entity assets?

A

assets available for use by the entity itsef

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9
Q

What are nonentity assets?

A

assets the entity is holding in a custodial capacity.

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10
Q

What are advances?

A

cash outlays made by a federal entity to its employees, contractors, grantees or others to cover all or part of the recipients anticipated expenses, or as advance payments for the costs of goods or services the entity acquires.

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11
Q

What are prepayments?

A

payments made by a federal entity to cover certain periodic expenses before those expenses are incurred.

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12
Q

How are advances and prepayments recorded?

A

as assets, until the conditions of the advance or prepayment are satisfied.

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13
Q

What values must be used to determine and recognize the cost today of estimated cash flows occurring in the future?

A

present values

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14
Q

What is present value?

A

the value of future cash flows discounted to the present time at a defined interest rate.

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15
Q

What is loan guarantee?

A

any guarantee, insurance, or other pledge with respect to the payment of all or part of the principal or interest on any debt obligation of a non federal borrower to a non federal lender

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16
Q

What are the three types of treasury securities??

A
  1. ) nonmarketable par value treasury securities
  2. ) market based treasury securities
  3. ) marketable treasury securities
17
Q

What are nonmarketable par value treasury securities?

A

special series debt securities that the US treasury issues to federal entities at face value (par value). Securities are redeemed at face value on demand - thus investing entities recover the full amount invested.

18
Q

What are market based treasury securities?

A

debt securities the US Treasury issues to federal entities without statutorily determined interest rates. Prices and interest rates mirror the terms of marketable treasury securities.

19
Q

What are marketable treasury securities?

A

incudes treasury bills, notes and bonds. Initially issued by the treasury to the marketplace and can then be bought and sold on securities exchange markets.

20
Q

When should a security be recognized as an asset?

A

upon acquisition

21
Q

What amount should be recognized as an asset?

A

the securities acquisition cost.

22
Q

What amount should be recognized as an asset if the acquisition is made in exchange for nonmonetary assets?

A

the acquired securities should be recognized at the fair market value of the securities acquired or the assets given up - whichever is more definitively determinable.

23
Q

How should the security be recorded as an asset if the acquisition cost is different than face value (par)?

A

recorded at the securities face value, plus or minus the premium or discount on the investment.

24
Q

What is a discount?

A

the excess of the securities face value over its purchase price.

25
Q

What is a premium?

A

the excess of the purchase price over the securities face value.

26
Q

How should premiums and discounts be reported?

A

amortized over the life of the treasury security using interest method.

27
Q

What is Operating Materials and Supplies?

A

OM&S - goods that have been purchased for use in normal operations

28
Q

What is inventory?

A

tangible personal property that is held for sale, used in the production of other goods to be sold, or in the process of being developed for sale.

29
Q

What accounting method are OM&S and Inventory recorded under?

A

consumption method

30
Q

What 2 things does the consumption method require?

A
  1. ) recognition of the historical cost - including all cost incurred to bring the item to its current condition and location - as an asset when received by entity.
  2. ) use of flow assumptions to assign costs to items consumed - must use FIFO or weight average
31
Q

What is FIFO?

A

First in, first out. assumes the first items added to inventory are the first to be used

32
Q

What is weighted average?

A

placed the same per item cost on each item at a point in time.

33
Q

Which inventory method is not permitted for federal entities?

A

LIFO

34
Q

What are stockpiles?

A

strategic and critical materials held due to statutory requirements for use in national defiense, conservation, or national emergencies.

35
Q

How are stockpile materials recorded?

A

as an asset upon receipt and as an expense upon disposal.

36
Q

Where is seized property, other than monetary values, reported??

A

in the notes

37
Q

What are commodities?

A

items acquired, held, sold or otherwise disposed of to stabilize or support market prices.