Answer: 2,200 units.
Explanation:
The complete exercise is:

A manufacturer shipped units of a certain product to two locations. The equation above shows the total shipping cost T, in dollars, for shipping c units to the closer location and shipping f units to the farther location. If the total shipping cost was $47,000 and 3,000 units were shipped to the farther location, how many units were shipped to the closer location?
Given the following equation:

You know that "T" is the total shipping cost (in dollars), "c" is the number of units shipped to the closer location and "f" is the number of units shipped to the farther location.
Based on the information given in the exercise, you can identify that, in this case:

Then, knowing those values, you need to substitute them into the given equation:

And finally, you must solve for "c" in order to calculate the number of units that were shipped to the closer location.
You get that this is:

Answer:
transferred out (COGM) 131,000
Cost of goods sold: 129,000
Explanation:
DM used 46,500
Direct labor 27,500
Overhead <u> 55,000 </u>
Total: 129,000 cost added for the period
Then, we calcualte the amount transferred-out:
Beginning WIP 14,000
Cost added 129,000
Ending WIP (12,000)
Trasferred out: 131,000 (cost of goods manufactured)
And finally, the cost of goods sold for the year:
Beginning FG 16,000
Trasferred out 131,000
Ending FG (18,000)
COGS: 129,000
Answer:
Explanation:
The coach of a college men’s soccer team records the resting heart rates of the 27 team members. You should not trust a confidence interval for the mean resting heart rate of all male students at this college based on these data because;
(a) with only 27 observations, the margin of error will be large.
(b) heart rates may not have a Normal distribution.
(c) the members of the soccer team can’t be considered a random sample of all students.
Answer:
We have to assume specific tax rate to come up with the income tax expenses. Let assume the tax rate is 30%.
The income tax expense in year 2: $53,400.
Explanation:
We have:
Depreciation expenses of the equipment in the second year = (Initial cost - salvage value) / Useful life = (168,000 - 0)/4 = $42,000.
Profit before tax in year 2 = Sales in year 2 - operating expenses in year 2 - Depreciation expenses in year 2 = 520,000 - 300,000 - 42,000 = $178,000.
Income tax expense in year 2 = Profit before tax in year 2 x tax rate = 178,000 x 30% = $53,400.
So, the answer is $53,400.
Answer: Debit overhead expenses $78,530 Credit wages payable $78,530
Explanation: The $78,530 was arrived at by adding all the wages amount ($620 + $910 + $77 000). Recognizing the journals as compound entries means the total amount of the wages would be used instead of simply recognizing the debits and credits for each wage amount.
Since the wages have been incurred but not paid, a payable has to be recognized. When payment is eventually to be made, it would be from the payable account by way of debiting the payable account and crediting cash.