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Refer to the information in Exercise 7-7 to complete the following requirements.

c. Prepare the adjusting entry to record bad debts expense using the estimate from part a. Assume the unadjusted balance in the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts is a $1,000 debit.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The amount of bad debt expense will be $26,650.

Step by step solution

01

Adjusting journal entry

Date

Particulars

Debit

Credit

Dec 31

Bad debt expense

$26,650

Allowance for doubtful accounts

$26,650

(To record the bad debt expense)

02

Working notes

Allowancefordoubtfulaccounts=Totalaccountsreceivables×Uncollectible=$570,000×4.5100=$25,650

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Warner Company’s year-end unadjusted trial balance shows accounts receivable of \(99,000, allowance for doubtful accounts of \)600 (credit), and sales of $280,000. Uncollectibles are estimated to be 0.5% of sales. Prepare the December 31 year-end adjusting entry for uncollectibles.

Solstice Company determines on October 1 that it cannot collect $50,000 of its accounts receivable from its customer P. Moore. It uses the direct write-off method to record this loss as of October 1. On October 30, P. Moore unexpectedly paid his account in full to Solstice Company. Record Solstice’s entry(ies) to reflect recovery of this bad debt.

Hitachi, Ltd., reports total revenues of ¥9,616,202 million for its current fiscal year, and its current fiscal year-end unadjusted trial balance reports a debit balance for trade receivables (gross) of ¥2,797,935 million.

a. Prepare the adjusting entry to record its bad debts expense assuming uncollectibles are estimated to be 0.4% of total revenues and its unadjusted trial balance reports a credit balance of ¥10,000 million for the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts.

Liang Company began operations on January 1, 2016. During its first two years, the company completed a number of transactions involving sales on credit, accounts receivable collections, and bad debts. These transactions are summarized as follows.

2016

a. Sold \(1,345,434 of merchandise (that had cost \)975,000) on credit, terms n/30.

b. Wrote off \(18,300 of uncollectible accounts receivable.

c. Received \)669,200 cash in payment of accounts receivable.

d. In adjusting the accounts on December 31, the company estimated that 1.5% of accounts receivable will be uncollectible.

2017

e. Sold \(1,525,634 of merchandise on credit (that had cost \)1,250,000), terms n/30.

f. Wrote off \(27,800 of uncollectible accounts receivable.

g. Received \)1,204,600 cash in payment of accounts receivable.

h. In adjusting the accounts on December 31, the company estimated that 1.5% of accounts receivable will be uncollectible.

Required

Prepare journal entries to record Liang’s 2016 and 2017 summarized transactions and its year-end adjustments to record bad debts expense. (The company uses the perpetual inventory system and it applies the allowance method for its accounts receivable. Round amounts to the nearest dollar.)

As the accountant for Pure-Air Distributing, you attend a sales managers’ meeting devoted to a discussion of credit policies. At the meeting, you report that bad debts expense is estimated to be \(59,000 and accounts receivable at year-end amount to \)1,750,000 less a $43,000 allowance for doubtful accounts. Sid Omar, a sales manager, expresses confusion over why bad debts expense and the allowance for doubtful accounts are different amounts. Write a one-page memorandum to him explaining why a difference in bad debts expense and the allowance for doubtful accounts is not unusual. The company estimates bad debts expense as 2% of sales.

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