A tourist from the US spends three nights in a hotel in Amsterdam Which statement(s) is (are) true?
a. This increases GDP of the Netherlands and decreases net exports of the US.
b. This increases GDP of the Netherlands and increase consumption of the US.
c. This increases consumption of the US, but decreases net exports of the US.
d. All of the above are correct
In: Economics
.
NEED ANSWER ASAP / ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE, COMPLETELY NEW ANSWER PLEASE
A US importer who owes and Belgian company 500,000 Euros payable in 30 days from today expects that the US Dollar will weaken during this period. What would you advise the importer to do? What would happen if the imported took your advice yet instead of the dollar weakening, the dollar actually strengthened?
ANSWER THROUGHLY 1-2 pages *** IN PARAGRAPGH FORM PLEASE NOT BULLET POINTS
COPY AND PASTE Answer in paragraphs, and no picture attachment please.
NEEDS TO BE AN ORIGINAL SOURCE ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE
In: Operations Management
.
NEED ANSWER ASAP / ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE, COMPLETELY NEW ANSWER PLEASE
A US importer who owes and Belgian company 500,000 Euros payable in 30 days from today expects that the US Dollar will weaken during this period. What would you advise the importer to do? What would happen if the imported took your advice yet instead of the dollar weakening, the dollar actually strengthened?
ANSWER THROUGHLY 1-2 pages *** IN PARAGRAPGH FORM PLEASE NOT BULLET POINTS
COPY AND PASTE Answer in paragraphs, and no picture attachment please.
NEEDS TO BE AN ORIGINAL SOURCE ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE
In: Operations Management
.
NEED ANSWER ASAP / ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE, COMPLETELY NEW ANSWER PLEASE
A US importer who owes and Belgian company 500,000 Euros payable in 30 days from today expects that the US Dollar will weaken during this period. What would you advise the importer to do? What would happen if the imported took your advice yet instead of the dollar weakening, the dollar actually strengthened?
ANSWER THROUGHLY 1-2 pages *** IN PARAGRAPGH FORM PLEASE NOT BULLET POINTS
COPY AND PASTE Answer in paragraphs, and no picture attachment please.
NEEDS TO BE AN ORIGINAL SOURCE ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE
In: Operations Management
.
NEED ANSWER ASAP / ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE, COMPLETELY NEW ANSWER PLEASE
A US importer who owes and Belgian company 500,000 Euros payable in 30 days from today expects that the US Dollar will weaken during this period. What would you advise the importer to do? What would happen if the imported took your advice yet instead of the dollar weakening, the dollar actually strengthened?
ANSWER THROUGHLY 1-2 pages *** IN PARAGRAPGH FORM PLEASE NOT BULLET POINTS
COPY AND PASTE Answer in paragraphs, and no picture attachment please.
NEEDS TO BE AN ORIGINAL SOURCE ANSWER NEVER USED BEFORE
In: Operations Management
The technology company you work for has had difficulties resulting from expert employees leaving the company after only 6 months to a year of employment. This turnover has caused client software projects to not be completed as scheduled. The CEO has turned to you as the HR director to find out what is wrong and to recommend a remedy. You do some initial investigations only to find that the salaried, full-time employees at this level of expertise are working 60 hours a week or more on a regular basis. You are concerned not only for the business implications of this attrition problem but the ethical implications.
Checklist: Please address each item separately
● Describe the company’s problem in your own words from a business and ethical perspective.
● Choosing one of the ethical approaches from the
Learning Activity, describe what ethical approach you would use for
the development of these employees and explain why.
● Describe the training and development methods you would use to
improve employee morale and motivation and to reduce
attrition.
In: Operations Management
You are the new accounting manager at the Barry Transport
Company. Your CFO has asked you to provide input on the company's
income tax position based on the following:
1)Pretax accounting income was $62 million and taxable income was $10 million for the year ended December 31, 2018.
2)The difference was due to three items:
A)Tax depreciation exceeds book depreciation by $50 million in 2018 for the business complex acquired that year. This amount is scheduled to be $80 million in 2019 and to reverse as ($80 million) and ($50 million) in 2020, and 2021, respectively.
B)Insurance of $10 million was paid in 2018 for 2019 coverage.
C)A $8 million loss contingency was accrued in 2018, to be paid in 2020.
3)No temporary differences existed at the beginning of 2018.
4)The tax rate is 40%.
Required:
1. Determine the amounts necessary to record
income taxes for 2018 and prepare the appropriate journal
entry.
2. Assume the enacted federal income tax law
specifies that the tax rate will change from 40% to 35% in 2020.
When scheduling the reversal of the depreciation difference, you
were uncertain as to how to deal with the fact that the difference
will continue to originate in 2019 before reversing the next two
years. Upon consulting PricewaterhouseCoopers' Comperio
database, you found:
.441 Depreciable and amortizable
assets
Only the reversals of the temporary difference at the balance
sheet date would be scheduled. Future originations are not
considered in determining the reversal pattern of temporary
differences for depreciable assets. FAS 109 [FASB ASC 740–Income
Taxes] is silent as to how the balance sheet date temporary
differences are deemed to reverse, but the FIFO pattern is
intended.
You interpret that to mean that, when future taxable amounts are
being scheduled, and a portion of a temporary difference has yet to
originate, only the reversals of the temporary difference at the
balance sheet date can be scheduled and multiplied by the tax rate
that will be in effect when the difference reverses. Future
originations (like the depreciation difference the second year) are
not considered when determining the timing of the reversal. For the
existing temporary difference, it is assumed that the difference
will reverse the first year the difference begins reversing.
Determine the amounts necessary to record income taxes for 2018 and
prepare the appropriate journal entry.
In: Accounting
You are the new accounting manager at the Barry Transport
Company. Your CFO has asked you to provide input on the company's
income tax position based on the following:
Pretax accounting income was $75 million and taxable income was $13 million for the year ended December 31, 2018.
The difference was due to three items:
Tax depreciation exceeds book depreciation by $60 million in 2018 for the business complex acquired that year. This amount is scheduled to be $70 million in 2019 and to reverse as ($70 million) and ($60 million) in 2020, and 2021, respectively.
Insurance of $10 million was paid in 2018 for 2019 coverage.
A $8 million loss contingency was accrued in 2018, to be paid in 2020.
No temporary differences existed at the beginning of 2018.
The tax rate is 40%.
Required:
1. Determine the amounts necessary to record
income taxes for 2018 and prepare the appropriate journal
entry.
2. Assume the enacted federal income tax law
specifies that the tax rate will change from 40% to 35% in 2020.
When scheduling the reversal of the depreciation difference, you
were uncertain as to how to deal with the fact that the difference
will continue to originate in 2019 before reversing the next two
years. Upon consulting PricewaterhouseCoopers' Comperio
database, you found:
.441 Depreciable and amortizable
assets
Only the reversals of the temporary difference at the balance
sheet date would be scheduled. Future originations are not
considered in determining the reversal pattern of temporary
differences for depreciable assets. FAS 109 [FASB ASC 740–Income
Taxes] is silent as to how the balance sheet date temporary
differences are deemed to reverse, but the FIFO pattern is
intended.
You interpret that to mean that, when future taxable amounts are
being scheduled, and a portion of a temporary difference has yet to
originate, only the reversals of the temporary difference at the
balance sheet date can be scheduled and multiplied by the tax rate
that will be in effect when the difference reverses. Future
originations (like the depreciation difference the second year) are
not considered when determining the timing of the reversal. For the
existing temporary difference, it is assumed that the difference
will reverse the first year the difference begins reversing.
Determine the amounts necessary to record income taxes for 2018 and
prepare the appropriate journal entry.
In: Accounting
You are the new accounting manager at the Barry Transport
Company. Your CFO has asked you to provide input on the company's
income tax position based on the following:
Pretax accounting income was $64 million and taxable income was $11 million for the year ended December 31, 2018.
The difference was due to three items:
Tax depreciation exceeds book depreciation by $50 million in 2018 for the business complex acquired that year. This amount is scheduled to be $70 million in 2019 and to reverse as ($60 million) and ($60 million) in 2020, and 2021, respectively.
Insurance of $9 million was paid in 2018 for 2019 coverage.
A $6 million loss contingency was accrued in 2018, to be paid in 2020.
No temporary differences existed at the beginning of 2018.
The tax rate is 40%.
Required:
1. Determine the amounts necessary to record
income taxes for 2018 and prepare the appropriate journal
entry.
2. Assume the enacted federal income tax law
specifies that the tax rate will change from 40% to 35% in 2020.
When scheduling the reversal of the depreciation difference, you
were uncertain as to how to deal with the fact that the difference
will continue to originate in 2019 before reversing the next two
years. Upon consulting PricewaterhouseCoopers' Comperio
database, you found:
.441 Depreciable and amortizable
assets
Only the reversals of the temporary difference at the balance
sheet date would be scheduled. Future originations are not
considered in determining the reversal pattern of temporary
differences for depreciable assets. FAS 109 [FASB ASC 740–Income
Taxes] is silent as to how the balance sheet date temporary
differences are deemed to reverse, but the FIFO pattern is
intended.
You interpret that to mean that, when future taxable amounts are
being scheduled, and a portion of a temporary difference has yet to
originate, only the reversals of the temporary difference at the
balance sheet date can be scheduled and multiplied by the tax rate
that will be in effect when the difference reverses. Future
originations (like the depreciation difference the second year) are
not considered when determining the timing of the reversal. For the
existing temporary difference, it is assumed that the difference
will reverse the first year the difference begins reversing.
Determine the amounts necessary to record income taxes for 2018 and
prepare the appropriate journal entry.
In: Accounting
You are a financial Planner making over $500 an hour.
The CEO and COO of Facebook ask you to write up an employee
benefits/retirement plan for their employees. Facebook’s goal is to
attract and retain qualified, creative and driven employees.
Facebook is also interested in making money for the company and
increasing their profit margin for the benefit of the
shareholders.
In: Finance