20 Current Liabilities
20 Current Liabilities
20 Current Liabilities
20-Current-Liabilities
TOPIC OUTLINE
Definition
Liabilities
Essential
Characteristics
CURRENT Measurement
LIABILITIES
Current Liabilities
Classification
Non-current
Liabilities
LECTURE NOTES
LIABILITIES
Liabilities are present obligations of an entity arising from past transactions or events, the settlement of
which is expected to result in an outflow from the entity of resources embodying economic benefits.
Essential Characteristics of Liabilities:
(1) Liabilities are PRESENT OBLIGATION.
It is NOT NECESSARY that the payee to whom the obligation is owed be identified. What is important
is that the entity identifies itself as liable to another entity.
(2) Liabilities arise from PAST TRANSACTIONS OR EVENTS.
This means that the liability is not recognized until it is incurred. The past event that leads to a
present obligation is called an obligating event.
An obligating event is an event that creates a legal (the settlement of the obligation can be enforced
by law) or constructive obligation (The event creates valid expectation on the part of other parties
that the entity will discharge the obligation, as in the case of constructive obligation) because the
entity has no realistic alternative but to settle the obligation created by the event.
(3) The settlement of the liability REQUIRES AN OUTFLOW of resources embodying economic benefits.
Settlement may be in the form of: (a) payment of cash; (b) transfer of non-cash assets; (c) provision
of future services. This characteristic is the main reason why STOCK DIVIDENDS PAYABLE is NOT a
LIABILITY but rather presented within EQUITY.
MEASUREMENT
Interest
Initial Subsequent Fair Value
CLASSIFICATION Amortized? Expense is
Measurement Measurement Changes
based on
Financial
Yes
Liabilities at
(Presented
Fair Value Fair Value Fair Value No Nominal Rate
in Profit or
through
FINANCIAL Loss)
Profit or Loss
LIABILITIES
Financial
Fair Value minus
Liabilities at
Transaction Amortized Cost Yes No Effective Rate
Amortized
Costs
Cost
Usually,
Yes, if Effective Rate if
Best Estimate of Best Estimate of
NON-FINANCIAL LIABILITIES measured at No the liability is
Cash Outflow Cash Outflow
present value measured at
present value
NOTES:
(a) Transaction costs are expensed immediately if the financial liability is designated initially as at fair
value through profit or loss. Transaction costs are incremental costs that are directly attributable to
the issue of a financial liability.
BREACH OF CONTRACTS
GENERAL RULE: If the company breached a covenant or contract, the long-term obligation BECOMES
IMMEDIATELY DEMANDABLE, thus presented as a CURRENT LIABILITY
EXCEPTIONS: (The liability is still presented a NON-CURRENT LIABILITY under the following conditions)
(1) If the creditor agreed to give the debtor a grace period for atleast 12 months after the balance sheet
date AND
(2) The said grace period was provide on or before the balance sheet date.
To provide a clear guidance on the above concept, please see the following concept map:
No grace period was
agreed upon
(CURRENT
BREACH OF LIABILITY) After balance sheet
COVENANT date (CURRENT
LIABILITY) Grace period given was
Grace period was less than 12 months
agreed upon (CURRENT LIABILITY)
On or before balance
sheet date
Grace period given was
equal or more than 12
months (NON-CURRENT
LIABILITY)
TRADE AND OTHER PAYABLES (a)
The frequently asked question regarding trade accounts payable is its adjusted balance. As a guide in
computing such, please see the below template:
SOLUTION GUIDE
Unadjusted balance xx
Add: Post-date checks and unreleased checks
(Please see FAR 03 – Cash and Cash Equivalents for further details) xx
Debit balances in AP (if the unadjusted balance is a net amount) xx
Less: Unrecorded purchase returns and allowances (xx)
Discounts forfeited (under net method) (xx)
Effect of Freight terms* xx(xx)
Adjusted balance xx
In relation to freight terms, please see the following guide (Please see FAR 05 – Inventories for
further details):
If the goods were in transit to the entity and the freight term is
FOB Shipping Point – Accounts payable and purchases should be increased.
FOB Destination – Ignore, purchases and accounts payable should be increased upon arrival
of the goods.
In relation to freight cost, its effect on accounts payable depends on the freight terms as well
and are summarized below:
Effect on Accounts Payable?
FOB Shipping Point, Freight Collect No effect
FOB Shipping Point, Freight Prepaid Increase
FOB Destination, Freight Prepaid No effect
FOB Destination, Freight Collect Decrease
UNEARNED INCOME (b)
Deferred revenue or unearned revenue is income already received but not yet earned. Unearned income
may come from:
Goods (Advances from customers)
Services (Unearned income from service contracts, unearned subscription revenue)
Use of entity’s resources (Unearned interest income, unearned rental income)
Gift certificates
Deferred revenue may be realizable within one year or in more than one year from the end of reporting
period.
If the deferred revenue is realizable within one year, it is classified as current liability. Typical examples of
current deferred revenue are unearned interest income, unearned rental income and unearned subscription
revenue. If the deferred revenue is realizable in more than one year, it is classified as noncurrent liability.
Typical examples of noncurrent deferred revenue are unearned revenue from long-term service contracts
and long-term leasehold advances.
In relation to unearned income, the frequently asked questions are (1) Earned portion (income); (2) Ending
balance of unearned income. To answer such question, use the T-account in relation to unearned income:
Unearned Income
Earned portion xx Beginning Balance xx
Cash receipts xx
End. Balance xx
For unearned income from gift certificates, please use the modified T-account:
Gift Certificates Payable
Redemption (whether from prior
Beginning Balance
year or current year sales) xx xx
Expired portion xx Cash receipts from Sales xx
End. Balance xx
DISCUSSION EXERCISES
STRAIGHT PROBLEMS
IDENTIFICATION OF CURRENT LIABILITIES
1. DAVAO COMPANY had the following accounts taken from the balance sheet as of December 31, 2019:
Cash in bank (net of bank overdraft of P20,000) P500,000
Trade accounts receivable (net of credit balance on
ABC INC. amounting to P10,000) 200,000
Trade accounts payable (net of debit balances in supplier’s
accounts of P15,000) 385,000
Accrued electric and power bills 40,000
Property dividends payable (at fair value) 150,000
Share dividends payable 130,000
Cash dividends payable (payable after 14 months) 120,000
Mortgage payable 250,000
8% Serial bonds payable –with 5 equal annual payments,
issued July 1 this year 500,000
Trade notes payable (15 months left before maturity) 150,000
Financial liabilities held for trading 145,000
Unearned rent income 50,000
Deferred income from service contracts 150,000
Accrued taxes payable 75,000
10% 5 year loans payable (October 1, 2019) 200,000
Deferred tax liability – expected reversal is early next year 90,000
Estimated premiums liability 110,000
Contested BIR tax assessment – possible obligation 60,000
Taxes withheld from employees 70,000
Loan of LANAO INC. guaranteed by DAVAO – possible that DAVAO will be liable 185,000
12% Notes Payable – maturing on October 31, 2020 1,500,000
10% Notes Payable – maturing on December 31, 2020 300,000
8% Loans Payable – maturing on July 1, 2021 500,000
15% Notes payable – maturing on April 1, 2021 1,000,000
Bonds payable 2,000,000
Additional Information:
The cash in bank comprises 2 bank accounts in 2 different banks.
In relation to the 12% Notes payable, the entity entered into a refinancing agreement with
BPIDO Bank to refinance 75% of the notes on December 15, 2019.
The whole 10% notes payable was refinanced on January 7, 2020. FOREVERMORE INC. has the
discretion to roll over the liability for at least 12 months from December 31, 2019.
The bank loan agreement on the 8% loans payable requires DAVAO to maintain a current ratio
of 3:1. If the current ratio falls down below 3:1, the loan becomes automatically payable on
demand. Unfortunately, DAVAO’s current ratio on December 31, 2018 is 2:1. However, On
January 2, 2020, the bank agreed not to collect the loan until after 13 months from December
31.
The term of the 15% notes payable give the holder a right to demand immediate payment if the
entity fails to make monthly interest payment within 10 days of the date the payment is due. On
December 31, 2019, DAVAO is three months behind in paying its required interest payment. On
December 31, 2019, the bank agreed to give DAVAO a 180 day grace period to pay the
outstanding balance.
The bonds payable are 5-year 12% bonds issued March 31, 2015. Interest is payable semi-
annually on March 31 and September 30.
Except for the 15% notes payable and bonds payable, all interests are payable annually. There
were no interest accruals made on any interest bearing liability as of year-end.
REQUIREMENT: How much is the total current liabilities to be presented on the balance sheet as of
December 31, 2019?
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
2. The balance in BICOL INC.’s accounts payable account at December 31, 2019 was P810,000 before
any year-end adjustments relating to the following:
(a) Checks drawn but not yet released to payees amounted to P15,000 while checks drawn and
released to payees but were post-dated amounted to P35,000.
(b) On December 27, 2019, one of the suppliers of BICOL INC. allowed the latter to return for full
credit goods shipped and billed at P50,000 on December 15, 2019. BICOL shipped the returned
goods on December 31, 2019 but the credit memo was received and recorded only on January
5, 2020.
(c) Goods purchased and shipped FOB shipping point, freight prepaid from a vendor on December
29, 2019 was still in transit as of year-end. The freight cost was P5,000. The invoice cost of
P65,000 of the goods was recorded only when it arrived on January 7, 2020.
(d) Goods shipped FOB shipping point on December 20, 2019 from a vendor to BICOL, were lost in
transit. The invoice cost was P45,000. On January 5, 2020, BICOL filed a P32,500 claim against
the common carrier.
(e) Goods shipped FOB destination, freight prepaid on December 21, 2019, from a vendor to BICOL,
were received on January 6, 2020. The invoice cost was P35,000 and the freight cost is P7,000.
(f) Goods with invoice cost of P25,000 were received in January 5, 2020 and included in the count
as <goods in transit=. Since the invoice was received in advance, it was recorded as purchases. It
was found out that the goods were shipped under FOB Destination.
REQUIREMENT: How much is the amount to be reported as accounts payable on December 31, 2019
Statement of Financial Position?
UNEARNED INCOME
3. QUEZON INC. sells subscriptions to a specialized directory that is published semi-annually and
shipped to subscribers on May 15 and November 15. Subscriptions received after the April 30 and
October 30 cut-off dates are held for the next publication. Cash from subscribers is received evenly
during the year and is credited to deferred revenues from subscriptions. Data relating to 2019 are as
follows:
Unearned revenue – January 1, 2019 P3,300,000
Receipts from subscriptions during 2019 18,000,000
REQUIREMENTS: (1) How much of the current year cash collections were recognized as revenue as of
the end of the year? (2) What amount should be reported as unearned income from subscription on
December 31, 2019?
4. PANGASINAN CORP. sells appliance service contracts agreeing to repair appliances for two-year
period. The past experience is that, of the total amount spent for repairs on service contracts, 40% is
incurred evenly during the first contract year and 60% is incurred evenly during the second contract
year. Receipts from service contract sales are P300,000 for 2018 and P400,000 for 2019. Receipts
from contracts are credited to unearned service revenue. All sales are made evenly during the year.
REQUIREMENTS: (1) What amount should be recognized as revenue from service contracts for the
years 2018, 2019 and 2020? (2) What amount should be reported as unearned service revenue on
December 31, 2018, December 31, 2019 and December 31, 2020?
5. CAVITE DEPARTMENT STORES sells gift certificates redeemable only when merchandise is purchased.
Upon redemption, the entity recognizes the unearned revenue as realized. Information for the current
year is as follows:
Gift certificates payable, January 1 360,000
Gift certificates sold 800,000
Gift certificates redeemed 730,000
Gift certificates expected not to be redeemed 60,000
Cost of goods sold 70%
REQUIREMENT: Compute the unearned revenue on December 31.
REFUNDABLE DEPOSITS
6. LAGUNA COMPANY sells products with reusable, expensive containers. The customer is charged a
deposit for each container delivered and receives a refund for each container returned within two
years after the year of delivery.
The entity provided the following information for 2019:
Containers held by customers on January 1, 2019 from deliveries in:
2017 75,000
2018 215,000 290,000
Containers delivered in 2019 390,000
Containers returned in 2019 from deliveries in:
2017 45,000
2018 125,000
2019 143,000 313,000
REQUIREMENT: Compute the liability for containers deposit on December 31, 2019.
ACCRUED EXPENSES
7. BATANGAS RETAIL STORES INC. is currently operating various retail stores in Batangas. The following
information was gathered in order for the company to prepare its year-end accrual on various
expenses:
BATANGAS pays its salespeople a salary plus a commission. Salaries are being paid twice a
month on the 5th day and 20th day of the month. The cut-off dates are every 13th day and 28th
day of the month. Information regarding the six salespeople are as follows:
No. of Years Employed Daily Salary
Abraham 10 2,000
Isaac 9 1,600
David 8 1,400
Samuel 6 1,200
Mary 3 900
ESCROW LIABILITY
9. On the first day of each month, MINDORO INC. receives from MARINDUQUE CORP. an escrow deposit
of P500,000 for real estate taxes. The entity records the P500,000 in an escrow account.
MARINDUQUE's 2019 real estate tax is P4,000,000, payable in equal installments on the first day of
each calendar quarter. On January 1, 2019, the balance in the escrow account was P600,000.
REQUIREMENT: On September 30, 2019, what amount should be reported as an escrow liability?
MULTIPLE CHOICE (THEORIES)
1. Which of the following is not an essential characteristic for a liability to exist?
A. The liability arises from an obligating event.
B. The settlement of the liability requires an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits.
C. The identification of the payee is a requirement.
D. None from the choices.
2. Which of the following is a liability item rather than equity item?
Redeemable Preference Stocks Dividends Cash Dividends
Shares Payable Payable
A. No Yes Yes
B. Yes Yes Yes
C. Yes No Yes
D. No No Yes
3. S1: Financial liabilities are classified as financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss (FVPL),
financial liabilities at fair value through other comprehensive income (OCI) or financial liabilities
at amortized cost.
S2: Transaction costs are expensed immediately if the financial liability is designated initially as at
fair value through profit or loss.
S3: Financial liabilities at amortized cost present gains on losses on changes in fair value within
profit or loss.
A. True, false, false D. False, true, false
B. False, true, true E. True, true, true
C. True, true, false
4. An entity shall measure initially a financial liability designated at fair value through profit loss at
A. Fair value C. Fair value plus transaction costs
10. I. A dividend declared which was payable 13 months after year-end is classified as current liability.
Entity’s normal operating cycle is 14 months.
II. Non-financial liabilities are initially and subsequently measured at the best estimate of amounts
needed to settle those obligations
III. Obligating events create either a legal or contractual obligations.
Which of the above statements is (are) correct?
A. I and II D. I, II and III
B. II and III E. Answer not given
C. I and III
11. Essential characteristics of liabilities:
I. The obligation must be to pay cash, transfer noncash asset or provide service at some future
time.
II. The liability arises from transaction or event that will happen at some future time.
III. It is not necessary that the payee to whom the obligation is owed be identified.
A. I and II D. I, II and III
B. II and III E. Answer not given
C. I and III
12. Which of the following does not meet the definition of a liability?
A. An obligation that is estimated in amount
B. A note payable with no specified maturity date
C. An obligation to provide goods or services in the future
D. The signing of a three-year employment contract at a fixed annual salary
13. Which of the following should be classified as noncurrent liability?
A. Unearned revenue
B. Accrued salaries payable to management
C. Mandatorily redeemable preference share
D. The currently maturing portion of long-term debt
14. A currently maturing obligation is classified as current. Which of the following scenarios will make the
liability as non-current?
I. The liability was refinanced before year-end for at least 12 months from year-end.
II. A 9-month grace period was received from the creditor after year-end.
A. I only C. I and II
B. II only D. Neither I nor II
15. Which of the following is a current liability?
A. Deferred tax liability C. Accrued expenses
B. Mortgage payable D. None from the choices
16. Which of the following is a noncurrent liability?
A. Income tax payable
B. Estimated warranty liability
C. One-year magazine subscription received in advance
D. Unearned interest income related to noninterest-bearing long-term note receivable
17. Which of the following is not considered a characteristic of a liability?
A. Present obligation
B. Arises from past event
C. Results in an outflow of resources
D. Liquidation is reasonably expected to require use of current assets
18. Which of the following statements is true in relation to the fair value option of measuring a financial
liability?
I. At initial recognition, an entity may irrevocably designate a financial liability at fair value
through profit or loss.
II. The financial liability is measured at every year-end and any changes in fair value are
recognized in profit or loss.
III. The interest expense on the financial liability is recognized using the nominal interest rate.
A. I and II only C. II and III only
B. I and III only D. I, II and III
19. Which of the following increases the balance of the accounts payable?
(1) Undelivered checks where the payee is a supplier of the entity.
(2) Goods in transit from a supplier shipped FOB Shipping Point.
(3) Goods received after year-end by the entity but recorded before year-end
A. 1 and 3 C. 1 and 2
B. 2 and 3 D. 1, 2 and 3
PROBLEMS
1. The following liabilities were obtained from the records of PALAWAN CORP. for the year ended
December 31, 2018:
Trade Accounts Payable (net of debit balances in supplier’s accounts of P10,000) P300,000
Financial liability held for trading 150,000
10% Serial bonds payable –with 10 equal annual payments, issued
October 1 this year 1,000,000
Deferred tax liability – expected reversal is next year 200,000
Deferred revenue 120,000
Share dividend payable 180,000
12% 5 year note payable issued on June 30, 2014 300,000
Unearned rent 50,000
Loan of CEBU CORP. guaranteed by PALAWAN – possible that
PALAWAN will be liable 125,000
Bank Overdraft 40,000
Claims for increase in wages and allowances by employees of the company,
covered in a pending lawsuit 125,000
All interests are payable annually and there were no accruals made as of year-end.
What is the total amount of current liabilities?
A. 1,065,000 C. 993,000
B. 950,000 D. 1,093,000
2. GUIMARAS CORP. provided the following data on December 31, 2014:
Trade accounts payable, including cost of goods
received on consignment of P150,000 1,350,000
Accrued taxes payable 125,000
Customers' deposit 100,000
GUIMARAS as guarantor 200,000
Bank overdraft 55,000
Accrued electric and power bills 60,000
Reserve for contingencies 150,000
What total amount should be reported as current liabilities?
A. 1,540,000 C. 1,740,000
B. 1,650,000 D. 1,840,000
3. The following liabilities are taken from the records of ILOILO INC. as of December 31, 2018:
12% Notes Payable – maturing on October 31, 2019 P1,500,000
10% Notes Payable – maturing on December 31, 2019 1,000,000
8% Loans Payable – maturing on July 1, 2019 500,000
Additional Information:
a) In relation to the 12% Notes payable, the entity entered into a refinancing agreement with
BPIDO Bank to refinance 75% of the notes on December 15, 2018.
b) The whole 10% notes payable was refinanced on January 7, 2019. ILOILO has the discretion to
roll over the liability for more than 12 months from December 31, 2018.
c) All interests are paid annually.
In relation to the above balances, what is the amount of current liability?
A. 875,000 C. 925,000
B. 500,000 D. 1,500,000
4. ILOCOS INC. has the following liabilities as of its year-end December 31, 2018:
15% Notes payable P2,000,000
12% Notes payable 1,000,000
Additional information:
1) The 15% notes payable was issued by ILOCOS on July 1, 2017 and will mature on July 1, 2020
with interest payment every July 1. The bank loan agreement requires ILOCOS to maintain a
current ratio of 3:1. If the current ratio falls down below 3:1, the loan becomes automatically
payable on demand. Unfortunately, ILOCOS’ current ratio on December 31, 2018 is 2:1.
However, On January 2, 2018, the bank agreed not to collect the loan until after 13 months
from December 31.
2) The 12% notes payable was issued by the Company on January 1, 2018 and will mature on
December 31, 2021 with interest payments every December 31. Unfortunately, the company
breached one of its provisions, thereby making the loan payable on demand as of year-end.
But on December 29, 2018, the bank agreed to give ILOCOS 180 days of grace period, after
which the bank will resume collection
How much is the amount of current liabilities based from the above amounts?
A. 3,000,000 C. 2,150,000
B. 2,000,000 D. 3,150,000
5. The balance in PANGASINAN COMPANY’s accounts payable account at December 31, 2014 was
P1,170,000 before any year-end adjustments relating to the following:
□ Goods were in transit from a vendor to PANGASINAN on December 31, 2014. The invoice cost
was P65,000 and the goods were shipped FOB shipping point on December 29, 2014. The goods
were received on January 2, 2015.
□ Goods shipped FOB shipping point on December 20, 2014 from a vendor to PANGASINAN, were
lost in transit. The invoice cost was P32,500. On January 5, 2015, PANGASINAN filed a P32,500
claim against the common carrier.
□ Goods shipped FOB destination on December 21, 2014, from a vendor to PANGASINAN, were
received on January 6, 2015. The invoice cost was P19,500.
What amount should PANGASINAN report as accounts payable on its December 31, 2014 statement
of financial position?
A. P1,202,500 C. P1,235,000
B. P1,222,000 D. P1,267,500
6. On December 31, 2018, LA UNION INC. has accounts payable balance of P1,000,000 before
adjustments for the following:
a) Checks drawn but not yet released to payees amounted to P12,000 while checks drawn and
released to payees but were post-dated amounted to P5,000.
b) On December 28, 2018, a vendor authorized LA UNION to return for full credit goods shipped
and billed at P25,000 on December 14, 2018. LA UNION shipped the returned goods on
December 31, 2018 but the credit memo was received and recorded only on January 3, 2019.
c) Goods purchased and shipped FOB shipping point, freight prepaid from a vendor on December
29, 2018 was still in transit as of year-end. The freight cost was P3,000. The invoice cost of
P50,000 of the goods was recorded only when it arrived on January 4, 2019.
d) Goods with invoice cost of P15,000 were received in January 5, 2019 and included in the count
as <goods in transit=. It was found out that the goods were shipped under FOB Destination.
What is the adjusted accounts payable?
A. 1,028,000 C. 1,025,000
B. 1,030,000 D. 1,010,000
7. BOHOL CORP. sells appliance service contracts agreeing to repair appliances for two-year period. The
past experience is that, of the total amount spent for repairs on service contracts, 40% is incurred
evenly during the first contract year and 60% is incurred evenly during the second contract year.
Receipts from service contract sales are P500,000 for 2014 and P600,000 for 2015. Receipts from
contracts are credited to unearned service revenue. All sales are made evenly during the year. What
amount should be reported as unearned service revenue on December 31, 2015?
A. 360,000 C. 480,000
B. 470,000 D. 630,000
8. CAPIZ COMPANY sells subscriptions to a specialized directory that is published semi-annually and
shipped to subscribers on April 15 and October 15. Subscriptions received after the March 31 and
September 30 cut-off dates are held for the next publication. Cash from subscribers is received evenly
during the year and is credited to deferred revenues from subscriptions. Data relating to 2014 are as
follows:
Deferred revenue from subscriptions, 12/31/13 P1,500,000
Cash receipts from subscribers 7,200,000
In its December 31, 2014 statement of financial position, how much should CAPIZ report as deferred
revenues from subscriptions?
A. P1,800,000 C. P3,600,000
B. P3,300,000 D. P5,400,000
9. ANTIQUE CORP. sells gift certificates, redeemable for store merchandise. The gift certificates have no
expiration date. The entity has the following information pertaining to the gift certificate sales and
redemptions:
Unearned revenue on January 1, 2014 750,000
2014 sales 2,500,000
2014 redemptions of prior year sales 250,000
2014 redemptions of current year sales 1,750,000
What amount should be reported as unearned revenue on December 31, 2014?
A. 500,000 C. 1,125,000
B. 1,000,000 D. 1,250,000
10. CAMIGUIN INC. operates a retail store and must determine the proper December 31, 2014, year-end
accrual for the following expenses:
□ The store lease calls for fixed rent of P6,000 per month, payable at the beginning of the month,
and an additional rent equal to 6% of net sales over P1 ,250,000 per calendar year, payable on
January 31 of the following year. Net sales for 2014 were P2,250,000.
□ An electric bill of P4,250 covering the period December 17, 2014 through January 16, 2015 was
received January 23, 2012.
What amount should ALBAY CORP. report as total current liabilities in its December 31, 2014
statement of financial position?
A. P1,555,000 C. P1,855,000
B. P1,630,000 D. P1,930,000
17. SULTAN KUDARAT CORP. requires refundable advance payments with special orders for machinery
constructed to customer's specifications. Information for 2014 is as follows:
Customer advances - balance, December 31, 2013 P 885,000
Advances received with orders in 2014 1,380,000
Advances applied to orders shipped in 2014 1,230,000
Advances applicable to orders cancelled in 2014 375,000
What amount should SULTAN KUDARAT CORP. report as current liability for customer's deposits in its
December 31, 2014 statement of financial position?
A. None C. P1,035,000
B. P660,000 D. P1,110,000
18. COTABATO CORP. reported the following payroll for the month of January:
Total wages 500,000
Income tax withheld 60,000
All wages paid were subject to SSS. The SSS tax rates were 7% each for employee and employer. The
entity remits payroll taxes on the 15th of the following month. In the financial statements for the
month of January, what amount should be reported respectively as payroll tax liability and payroll tax
expense?
A. 60,000 and 70,000 C. 95,000 and 70,000
B. 95,000 and 35,000 D. 130,000 and 35,000
19. PAMPANGA CORP. collects 15% in city sales taxes on room rentals, in addition to a P200; per room,
per night, occupancy tax. Sales taxes for each month are due at the end of the following month, and
occupancy taxes are due fifteen days after the end of each calendar quarter. On January 3, 2014, the
entity paid the November 2013 sales taxes and the fourth quarter 2013 occupancy taxes. Additional
information for the fourth quarter of 2013 is as follows:
Room rentals Room nights
October 1,000,000 1,100
November 1,100,000 1,200
December 1,500,000 1,800
What amount should be reported respectively as sales taxes payable and occupancy taxes payable on
December 31, 2013?
A. 390,000 and 600,000 C. 540,000 and 600,000
B. 390,000 and 820,000 D. 540,000 and 820,000
20. ZAMBALES INC. sells 1- and 2-year subscriptions for the video-of-the-month business. Subscriptions
are collected in advance and credited to sales. An analysis of the recorded sales activity revealed the
following:
2014 2015
Sales 420,000 500,000
Less cancelations 20,000 30,000
Net sales 400,000 470,000
Subscription expirations:
2014 120,000
2015 155,000 130,000
2016 125,000 200,000
2017 . 140,000
400,000 470,000
On December 31, 2015, what amount should be reported as unearned subscription revenue?
A. 340,000 C. 470,000
B. 465,000 D. 495,000
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