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Nonexchange expenditures are the mirror image of nonexchange revenues. A state government provided several grants to school districts and local governments during its fiscal year ending August 31. On August 1, 2008, it announced a $2 million grant to a local school district for the purchase of computers. The district can spend the funds upon receipt. On September 15, 2008, the state mailed a check for the full amount to the district. The district spent $1.5 million on computers during fiscal 2009 (i.e., the year ending August 31, 2009) and expects to spend the remaining $0.5 million in fiscal 2010. On the same date the state announced a $10 million grant to another school district for the acquisition of equipment. However, per the provisions of this grant the state will make payments only upon receiving documentation from the district that it has incurred allowable costs. In fiscal 2009, the district incurred and documented allowable costs of $8 million. Of this, the state paid only $7 million, expecting to reimburse the district for the balance early in fiscal 2010. The state also announced a $5 million grant to a third school district, again for the acquisition of computers. The state will make annual five $1 million payments to the district, starting on September 15, 2009. The district is required to expend the funds in the fiscal year in which they are received. Toward the end of fiscal 2009, it awarded a $500,000 contract to the accounting department of a local university to support a review of the state's cost accounting system. The department intends to carry out the review during 2010 and issue its final report to the state in early 2011. Upon announcing the award, the state made an advance payment of $100,000 to the department. It intends to pay the balance when the department completes the project to the satisfaction of the state.
1. Describe briefly how the recipients would account, in both fund and government-wide statements for the awards.
Hubbard argues that the Fed can control the Fed funds rate, but the interest rate that is important for the economy is a longer-term real rate of interest. How much control does the Fed have over this longer real rate?
Coures:- Fundamental Accounting Principles: - Explain the goals and uses of special journals.
Accounting problems, Draw a detailed timeline incorporating the dividends, calculate the exact Payback Period b) the discounted Payback Period. the IRR, the NPV, the Profitability Index.
Term Structure of Interest Rates
Write a report on Internal Controls
Prepare the bank reconciliation for company.
Create a cost-benefit analysis to evaluate the project
Theory of Interest: NPV, IRR, Nominal and Real, Amortization, Sinking Fund, TWRR, DWRR
Distinguish between liquidity and profitability.
Your Corp, Inc. has a corporate tax rate of 35%. Please calculate their after tax cost of debt expressed as a percentage. Your Corp, Inc. has several outstanding bond issues all of which require semiannual interest payments.
Simple Interest, Compound interest, discount rate, force of interest, AV, PV
CAPM and Venture Capital
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