问题 多项选择题

甲公司内审人员于2012年底对企业计提的坏账准备复核时,发现2011年滥用会计政策,将对某关联企业发生的应收账款300万元全额计提了坏账准备,比规定比例多提285万元,坏账准备余额达到315万元。2012年甲公司坏账准备余额应为36万元,甲公司所得税税率为25%,2012年甲公司正确的会计处理有()。

A.冲减2012年管理费用279万元,减少坏账准备279万元

B.冲减坏账准备285万元并登记"以前年度损益调整"和"递延所得税资产"等

C.将"以前年度损益调整"余额213.75万元转入"利润分配"

D.计提2012年坏账准备6万元

E.调整2012年期初留存收益的相关项目

答案

参考答案:B, C, D, E

解析:滥用会计政策属于重大会计差错,应该调整发现当期期初留存收益和其他相关项目的期初数,所以选项A的处理不正确。本题冲减坏账准备285万元后,仍有余额30万元,2012年末坏账准备余额应为36万元,所以2012年应该补提6万元。

单项选择题

It’s a cliche—but true—that a huge obstacle to a per economic recovery is the lack of confidence in a p recovery. If consumers and businesses were more confident, they would be spending, hiring and lending more freely. Instead, we’re deluged with reports suggesting that, because the recession was so deep, it will take many years to regain anything like the pre-crisis prosperity. Just last week, for example, the McKinsey Global Institute released a study estimating that the country needs 21 million additional jobs by 2020 to reduce the unemployment rate to 5 percent. The study was skeptical that this would happen. Pessimism and slow growth become a vicious cycle.

Battered confidence most obviously reflects the ferocity and shock of the financial collapse and the ensuing recession, including the devastating housing collapse. But there’s another, less appreciated cause: disillusion with modern economics. Probably without realizing it, most Americans had accepted the fundamental promises of contemporary economics. These were: First, we know enough to prevent another Great Depression; second, although we can’t prevent every recession, we know enough to ensure sustained and, for the most part, p recoveries. These propositions, endorsed by most economists, had worked themselves into society’s belief structure.

Embracing them does not preclude economic disappointments, setbacks, worries or risks. But for most people most of the time, it does preclude economic calamity. People felt protected. If you stop believing them, then you act differently. You begin shielding yourself, as best you can, against circumstances and dangers that you can’t foresee but that you fear are there. You become more cautious. You hesitate more before making a big commitment-buying a home or car, if you’re a consumer; hiring workers, if you’re an employer; starting a new business, if you’re an entrepreneur; or making loans, if you’re a banker. Almost everyone is hunkered down in some way.

One disturbing fact from the McKinsey report is this: The number of new businesses, a traditional source of jobs, was down 23 percent in 9,010 from 2007; the level was the lowest since 1983, when America had about 75 million fewer people. Large corporations are standoffish. They have about $2 trillion of cash and securities on their balance sheets, which could be used for hiring and investing in new products.

It’s not that economics achieved nothing. The emergency measures thrown at the crisis in many countries exceptionally low interest rates, "stimulus" programs of extra spending and tax cuts—probably averted another Depression. But it’s also true that there’s now no consensus among economists as to how to strengthen the recovery. Economists suffer from what one of them calls "the pretense-of-knowledge syndrome." They act as if they understand more than they do and presume that their policies, whether of the left or right, have benefits more predictable than they actually are. It’s worth remembering that the recovery’s present slowdown is occurring despite measures taken to speed it up.

So modern economics has been oversold, and the public is now disbelieving. The disillusion feeds stubbornly low confidence.

Were they more open-minded about economic calamities, people would()

A. take care not to trigger them in the first place

B. become more cautious in making purchase decisions

C. become less hesitant in economic activities

D. feel more protected from unforeseeable dangers

单项选择题