Chapter 10 Flashcards

1
Q

Property, Plant, & Equipment

A

separate category on classified balance sheet
follows long term investments

physical assets deployed in the productive operation of the business, like land, buildings, and equipment

does not include idle facilities

listed according to expected life
land, buildings, equipment

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2
Q

capital expenditures

A

Ordinary and necessary costs incurred to place an item of property, plant, or equipment in its condition for intended use; such amounts are included in the asset account

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3
Q

expenditures may arise that are not “ordinary and necessary

A

they need to be expensed as incurred

ex: repair

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4
Q

Interest paid to finance purchase of PPE

A

expensed

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5
Q

Interest paid to finance construction

A

interest related to the period of time during which active construction is ongoing is capitalized

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6
Q

Acquiring land

A

certain costs are ordinary and necessary and should be assigned to Land

include the cost of the land, title fees, legal fees, survey costs, and zoning fees. Also included are site preparation costs like grading and draining, or the cost to raze an old structure

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7
Q

land improvements

A

asset category includes the cost of parking lots, sidewalks, landscaping, irrigation systems, and similar expenditures

why separate? to account for deprecation

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8
Q

lump-sum purchase

A

A single price paid for a package of assets; the purchase price must be allocated to each of the components

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9
Q

Materiality

A

businesses simply choose to expense small costs as incurred - ex: trash can

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10
Q

depreciation

A

process of “allocation” not “valuation

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11
Q

service life

A

The period of time that a depreciable asset will be in use by an entity; the time interval over which the asset will be depreciated

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12
Q

Physical deterioration

A

“Wear and tear” will eventually cause most assets to simply wear out and become useless. Thus, physical deterioration serves to establish an outer limit on the service life of an asset.

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13
Q

Obsolescence

A

The shortening of service life due to technological advances that cause an asset to become out of date and less desirable

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14
Q

Inadequacy

A

An economic determinant of service life which is relevant when an asset is no longer fast enough or large enough to fill the competitive and productive needs of a company

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15
Q

depreciation method

A

straight-line
units-of-output, and
double-declining balance

simply the pattern by which the cost is allocated to each of the periods involved in the service life

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16
Q

Cost

A

The dollar amount assigned to a particular asset, usually the ordinary and necessary amount expended to get an asset in place and in condition for its intended use.

17
Q

Service life

A

The useful life of an asset to an enterprise, usually relating to the anticipated period of productive use of the item.

18
Q

Salvage value

A

residual value

This is the amount expected to be realized at the end of an asset’s service life; for example, the anticipated future sales proceeds for used equipment.

19
Q

Depreciable base

A

cost - salvage value

amount of cost that will be allocated to the service life

20
Q

Book value

A

Net book value

refers to the balance sheet amount at a point in time that reveals the cost minus the amount of accumulated depreciation

21
Q

straight-line approach

A

annual depreciation is calculated by dividing the depreciable base by the service life

A simple depreciation method by which the depreciable base is spread uniformly over the service life

included in each years income statement

22
Q

Fractional period depreciation

A

method of straight line

record depreciation when items are purchased during the year

23
Q

units-of-output

A

allocates the depreciable base over the units of output rather than years of use

logical to use this approach in those situations where the life is best measured by identifiable units of machine “consumption.”

24
Q

double-declining balance

A

accelerated depreciation

results in relatively large amounts of depreciation in early years of asset life and smaller amounts in later years

if quality of service declines over time or if repair cost will rise over time to offset the declining depreciation amount

25
Q

Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System

A

MACRS provides for a general depreciation system and an alternative system. Within those systems are generally provisions relating to the 200% declining balance, 150% declining balance, and straight-line techniques.