Appearing next is information pertaining to Garrels Companys Allowance for doubtful accounts. Examine this information and answer

Question:

Appearing next is information pertaining to Garrels Company’s Allowance for doubtful accounts. Examine this information and answer the following questions.

Required:
1. Solve for the unknowns in the preceding schedule. (Hint: Use T-accounts.)
2. Make all entries related to the Allowance for doubtful accounts account for 2012–2014.
3. Make all entries for bad debts for 2012–2014 assuming that Garrels did not accrue for estimated bad debt losses but instead recorded its bad debt provisions once receivables were determined to be uncollectible. (This is called the direct write-off method.)
4. Why does GAAP require the allowance method over the direct write-off method?
5. Calculate the cumulative difference in reported pre-tax income under the allowance and direct write-off methods over the 2012–2014 period.
6. Assume that it is the end of 2015 and Garrels management is trying to decide on the amount of the bad debt provision for 2015. Based on an aging of accounts receivable, the accounting department feels that a $400,000 provision is appropriate. However, the company just learned that a customer with an outstanding accounts receivable of $300,000 may have to file for bankruptcy. The decision facing Garrels management is whether to increase the initial provision of $400,000 by $300,000, by some lesser amount, or by nothing at all. What is your recommendation?
7. Continuing the scenario from requirement 6 now consider the following additional information. Assume that you are a member of the company’s compensation committee. Assume further that the company’s chief financial officer (CFO) is solely responsible for deciding the amount of the bad debt provision to record and that the CFO has a cash bonus plan that is a function of reported earnings before income taxes. Specifically, assume that the CFO receives an annual cash bonus of zero if earnings before income taxes is below $17 million and 10.0% of the amount by which earnings before income taxes exceeds $17 million and up to a maximum bonus of $1 million (that is, when net income reaches $27 million, no further bonus is earned). What adjustment to the initial $400,000 bad debt provision might the CFO make in each of the following scenarios? Assume that the following earnings before income taxes include the initial $400,000 provision for bad debts.
a. $11 million
b. $18.2 million
c. $38.25 million
d. $27.15 million
8. What other scenarios can you identify in which managers might use the provision for bad debts to accomplish some contract-related strategy?
9. Identify other items in the financial statements (besides the bad debt provision) that managers have the ability to “manage.”

Financial Statements
Financial statements are the standardized formats to present the financial information related to a business or an organization for its users. Financial statements contain the historical information as well as current period’s financial...
GAAP
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) is the accounting standard adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). While the SEC previously stated that it intends to move from U.S. GAAP to the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), the...
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivables are debts owed to your company, usually from sales on credit. Accounts receivable is business asset, the sum of the money owed to you by customers who haven’t paid.The standard procedure in business-to-business sales is that...
Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Financial Reporting and Analysis

ISBN: 978-0078025679

6th edition

Authors: Flawrence Revsine, Daniel Collins, Bruce, Mittelstaedt, Leon

Question Posted: