Gottschalk Company sponsors a defined benefit plan for its 100 employees. On January 1, 2020, the companys

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Gottschalk Company sponsors a defined benefit plan for its 100 employees. On January 1, 2020, the company’s actuary provided the following information.

Accumulated other comprehensive loss (PSC).......................................$150,000
Pension plan assets (fair value and market-related asset value)...........200,000
Accumulated benefit obligation..................................................................260,000
Projected benefit obligation........................................................................380,000

The average remaining service period for the participating employees is 10 years. All employees are expected to receive benefits under the plan. On December 31, 2020, the actuary calculated that the present value of future benefits earned for employee services rendered in the current year amounted to $52,000; the projected benefit obligation was $490,000; fair value of pension assets was $276,000; the accumulated benefit obligation amounted to $365,000. The expected return on plan assets and the discount rate on the projected benefit obligation were both 10%. The actual return on plan assets is $11,000. The company’s current year’s contribution to the pension plan amounted to $65,000. No benefits were paid during the year.


Instructions

a. Determine the components of pension expense that the company would recognize in 2020. (With only one year involved, you need not prepare a worksheet.)

b. Prepare the journal entry to record the pension expense and the company’s funding of the pension plan in 2020.

c. Compute the amount of the 2020 increase/decrease in gains or losses and the amount to be amortized in 2020 and 2021.

d. Indicate the pension amounts reported in the financial statement as of December 31, 2020.

Discount Rate
Depending upon the context, the discount rate has two different definitions and usages. First, the discount rate refers to the interest rate charged to the commercial banks and other financial institutions for the loans they take from the Federal...
Expected Return
The expected return is the profit or loss an investor anticipates on an investment that has known or anticipated rates of return (RoR). It is calculated by multiplying potential outcomes by the chances of them occurring and then totaling these...
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Related Book For  answer-question

Intermediate Accounting

ISBN: 978-1119503668

17th edition

Authors: Donald E. Kieso, Jerry J. Weygandt, Terry D. Warfiel

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