Accounting Basics
The Balance Sheet
Transactions and Equation Analysis
GAAPs
Advanced Concepts
100

What is the fundamental accounting equation?

Assets - Liabilities = Owner's Equity or 

Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity

100

What order are assets listed in on a balance sheet?

Order of liquidity

100

What happens to assets when a company buys office furniture on credit?

Assets increase, liabilities increase

100

Which GAAP assumes a business will continue operating indefinitely?

Going concern concept

100

What is the impact on the accounting equation if a business takes out a $10,000 loan and immediately uses $4,000 of it to buy equipment?

Assets increase by $6,000 (cash), equipment increases by $4,000, liabilities increase by $10,000

200

What does GAAP stand for?

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

200

I appear at the beginnings and ends of a balance sheet for a total of four times. What am I?

Dollar sign/currency sign.

200

A business performs a $500 service and gets paid in cash. What changes occur in the accounting equation?

Cash increases, Owner’s Equity increases due to revenue

200

What principle advises accountants to choose the less optimistic value when faced with uncertainty?

Principle of conservatism.

200

A business has total liabilities of $90,000 and owner’s equity of $60,000. What are its total assets?

$150 000

300

What is the difference between a creditor and a debtor?

Creditor is owed money; debtor owes money

300

What is the value of the Assets if Owner's Equity = $120,000, Liabilities = $50,000. 

$170 000

300

If you make a change to one side of the equation analysis sheet, the other side must ________________________

Balance. Whatever is done on one side of the equation analysis sheet must be reflected on the other side so that both sides balance.

300

Which GAAP ensures personal and business finances are kept separate?

Business Entity Concept

300

A company buys equipment for $40,000, putting $10,000 down and financing the rest. After two years, it pays off another $10,000. What is the remaining liability?

Original liability = $30,000, after payments = $20,000 remaining.

400

Write out the Google Sheets formula used to do quick addition or subtraction. Use the cells C3 to C11 as your example numbers. 

=SUM(C3:311)

400

The owner of a business invests $15,000 into the company. How does this affect the balance sheet?

Cash: + $15, 000

Owner's Equity: + $15, 000

400

The numbers on a balance sheet reflect a company's _______________ on a particular date. 

Financial position.

400

Why can the going concern concept affect how assets are recorded on a balance sheet?

If a company is assumed to continue operations, assets can be recorded at cost rather than liquidation value.

400

A company has $75,000 in cash and $50,000 in liabilities. It repays $20,000 of its debt. What are the new balances?

Cash = $55,000, Liabilities = $30,000

500

List three of the five important pieces of information that receipts provide. 

1. Who issued the receipt

2. Who received the receipt

3. Date

4. What was purchased

5. Providing objective evidence of the transaction

500

What is the other word/name for Owner's Equity?

Capital

500

A business earns $40,000 in revenue but only collects $30,000 in cash, with the remaining on credit. How does this affect assets, liabilities, and equity?

Cash increases by $30,000, Accounts Receivable increases by $10,000, and Owner’s Equity increases by $40,000 due to revenue.

500

A business reports an expected lawsuit gain of $50,000 on its financial statements, despite the case not being settled. What GAAP principle does this violate?

Principle of Conservatism—businesses should only recognize gains when they are confirmed, but must record potential losses.

500

A company starts with $80,000 in equity. During the year, it earns $20,000 in revenue, incurs $5,000 in expenses, and withdraws $8,000 for personal use. What is the new equity?

OE = 80,000 + 20,000 - 5,000 - 8,000 = $87,000

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