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PAS 2 - Inventories - Accounting Standard that is useful in understanding Financial Accounting Reporting
Course: Bs. Accountancy (BSA)
324 Documents
Students shared 324 documents in this course
University: Aklan State University
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PAS 2 INVENTORY
1. Which of the following items should be excluded from a company’s inventory at the balance sheet date?
a. Goods lost while in transit, which were purchased FOB shipping point.
b. Goods held by customers on approval or on trial
c. Goods out on consignment
d. Goods purchased FOB destination
2. The cost of inventories shall comprise all costs of purchase, cost of conversion and other costs incurred
in bringing the inventories to their present location and condition. Which of the following cost shall be
included in the cost of inventories?
a. Import duties and other taxes, transport, handling and other costs directly attributable to the acquisition
of finished goods, materials and services
b. Abnormal amounts of wasted materials, labor or other production costs.
c. Storage costs unnecessary in its production process.
d. Administrative overheads that do not contribute to brining inventories to their present location and
condition.
3. The valuation of inventories on prime cost basis
a. Is always achieved when standard costing is adopted
b. Would achieve the same results as direct costing
c. Would exclude all overhead from reported inventory costs.
d. Is always achieved when the LIFO flow assumption is adopted
4. A major advantage of the retail inventory method is that it
a. Permits companies which use it avoid taking annual inventory
b. Hides costs from customers and employees
c. Provides a method for inventory control and facilitates determination of the periodic inventory.
d. Gives a more accurate statement of inventory cost than other methods
5. Technically, the weighted average inventory cost flow method is applicable to which of the following
inventory system?
I. Perpetual II. Periodic
a. Both I and II b. I only c. II only d. Neither I nor II
6. The measurement basis ‘net realizable value’ is best described as:
a. unamortised historical cost;
b. an asset’s selling price or a liability’s settlement amount;
c. unadjusted initial cost;
d. time adjusted cash flow.
7. Inventories are assets
I. held for sale in the ordinary course of business
II. in the process of production for such sale
III. in the form of materials or supplies to be consumed in the production process or in the rendering of
services
a. I and II only b. I only c. I, II and III d. II and III only
8. Net realizable value is
a. estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business
b. estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the estimated costs of completion in the
case of finished goods and estimated costs necessary to make the sale in the case of work in process
c. estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the estimated costs of completion in the
and estimated costs necessary to make the sale.
d. is the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a liability settled, between knowledgeable,
willing parties in an arm’s length transaction.
9. The weighted average inventory costing method is particularly suitable to inventory where:
a. dissimilar products are stored in separate locations;
b. the entity carries stocks of raw materials, work-in-progress and finished goods;
c. goods have distinct use-by dates and the goods produced first must be sold earliest;
d. homogeneous products are mixed together.
10. When an inventory costing formula is changed, the change is required to be applied:
a. prospectively and the adjustment taken through the current profit or loss;
b. retrospectively and the adjustment taken through the opening balance of accumulated profits;
c. prospectively and the current period adjustment recognized directly in equity;
d. retrospectively and the adjustment recognized as an extraordinary gain or loss.
11. The measurement rule for inventories, mandated by IAS 2 Inventories, is:
a. lower of fair value and selling price;
b. lower of cost and net realizable value;
c. higher of initial cost and realizable value;
d. higher of completion costs and replacement costs.