Financial statements The following is an excerpt from a telephone conversation between Ben Simpson, president of Main

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Financial statements The following is an excerpt from a telephone conversation between Ben Simpson, president of Main Street Co., and Tami Lundgren, owner of Reliable Employment Co.:

Ben: Tami, you’re going to have to do a better job of finding me a new computer programmer. That last guy was great at programming, but he didn’t have any common sense.

Tami: What do you mean? The guy had a master’s degree with straight A’s.

Ben: Yes, well, last month he developed a new financial reporting system. He said we could do away with manually preparing an end-of-period spreadsheet and financial statements. The computer would automatically generate our financial statements with “a push of a button.”

Tami: So what’s the big deal? Sounds to me like it would save you time and effort.

Ben: Right! The balance sheet showed a minus for supplies!

Tami: Minus supplies? How can that be?

Ben: That’s what I asked.

Tami: So, what did he say?

Ben: Well, after he checked the program, he said that it must be right. The minuses were greater than the pluses. . . .

Tami: Didn’t he know that Supplies can’t have a credit balance—it must have a debit balance?

Ben: He asked me what a debit and credit were.

Tami: I see your point.

1. Comment on

(a) the desirability of computerizing Main Street Co.’s financial reporting system,

(b) the elimination of the end-of-period spreadsheet in a computerized accounting system, and

(c) the computer programmer’s lack of accounting knowledge.

2. Explain to the programmer why Supplies could not have a credit balance.

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Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Financial And Managerial Accounting

ISBN: 9781305267831,9781305267848

13th Edition

Authors: Carl S. Warren , James M. Reeve , Jonathan Duchac

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