SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
ACCA Financial Management
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
certifications
,
business-skills
,
acca
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The process of adjusting for the time value of money backward in time to present value. See also Compounding.
Discounting
Opening inventory
Allocation
Net assets to total assets
2. (excess of revenues over expenses/net assets)- In not-for-profit health care organizations - it measures the rate of return for each dollar in net assets. In for-profit organizations - it measures the rate of return for each dollar in owners' equity;
Cost Accounting
Return on net assets
Direct costs
Annuity
3. The percentage of each asset relative to total assets.
Basis of Allocation
Contribution margin
Asset mix
Retained earnings
4. [Total Revenues/ Total Assets]
Compounding
Mortgage
Asset Turnover Ratio
Hedge
5. One of the four major financial statements of a health care organization. It presents a summary of the organization's assets - liabilities - and net assets as of a certain date.
Horizontal analysis
Balance sheet
Spillover cash flows
Efficiency
6. (excess of revenues over expenses/total assets)- A measure of how much profit is earned for each dollar invested in assets. In for-profit organizations it is called return on assets and is calculated as: net income/assets.
Current ratio
Net Assets
Return on total assets
Discounted cash flows
7. Revenues generated from an organization's operating activities.
Operating revenues
Operating margin
Administrative cost centers
G & A expenses
8. The expenses incurred from an organization's operating activities.
Fixed costs
Program budget
Operating expenses
Certainty
9. Financial and non-financial standards against which organizational performance is measured.
Performance measure
Cost Accounting
Cash budget
Average Days Receivable
10. The system of accounting that recognizes revenues when earned and expenses when resources are used. This method is used by most non-governmental health care organizations. See also Cash basis of accounting.
Opportunity cost
Line-item budget
Financing activities
Accrual basis of accounting
11. [current assets/current liabilities].- This liquidity ratio measures the proportion of all current assets to all current liabilities to determine how easily current debt can be paid off. It is one of the most commonly used ratios.
SWOT analysis
Current ratio
ROI
Days cash on hand
12. [(cash + marketable securities)/current liabilities). A liquidity ratio that measures how much cash and marketable securities are available to payoff all current liabilities.
Asset Management ratios
Acid test ratio
Clinical cost centers
Liquidity ratios
13. General and administrative expenses. Operating expenses that are not contained in the labor or supplies budgets.
Not-for-profit
G & A expenses
Prepaid assets
Return on total assets
14. Decisions regarding the relative amount of debt and equity used to finance the organization's non-current assets.
Net assets released from restriction
Capital structure decision
Debt service coverage
Accrual basis of accounting
15. Properties and equipment less accumulated depreciation.
SWOT analysis
Asset Turnover Ratio
Properties and equipment - net
Interest
16. The degree to which standards are met.
Effectiveness
Liquidity
Common costs
Expansion decisions
17. Cash inflows and outflows for the organization resulting from investing activities such as purchasing and selling investments or investing in itself by purchasing or selling non-current assets. It also includes transfers to and from the parent corpor
Cash flows from investing activities
Comparative approach
Annuity
Bonds
18. Bonds that have received a rating ranging from AM to BBB (at S&P) - or Aaa to Bbb (Moody's) - of which the highest are called quality ratings.
Opening inventory
Investment grade
Properties and equipment
Increase in unrestricted net assets
19. Expenses that have been incurred - but not yet paid.
Excess of revenues over expenses
Current ratio
Bonds
Accrued expenses
20. Series of payments over time - such as interest paid to bondholders.
Current liabilities
Traditional profit centers
Deferred revenues
Periodic payments
21. The system of accounting that recognizes revenues when cash is received and expenses when cash is paid out. See also Accrual basis of accounting.
Notes payable
Cash basis of accounting
Average Days Receivable
Fixed (interest) rate debt
22. Costs not traced to a cost object - but that must eventually be allocated across cost objects. See also Direct costs.
Indirect costs
Periodic payments
Present value of an annuity
Long Term Solvency ratios
23. Policies and procedures that address when and how to collect revenues - such as paying at time of service - sending accounts to collection agencies - and writing off accounts as bad debt.
Efficiency
Cost avoidance
Non-current liabilities
Collections policies and procedures
24. An investment that generates an annuity for an indefinite period of time - basically forever.
Perpetuity
Expansion decisions
Allocation base
Total asset turnover
25. The current traded rate for similar risk securities.
Market rate of interest
Current liabilities
Expense volume variance
Operating margin
26. Full-time equivalent employees. Two half-time employees equal one FTE.
FTE
Contribution margin
Decentralization
Cost centers
27. An entity that sells bonds in order to raise money.
Step Down
Cost of goods sold
Loan amortization schedule
Issuer
28. Portion of profit an organization distributes to investors. By law - only investor-owned health care organizations can distribute dividends outside the organization.
Coupon rate
Dividends
Operating activities
Fixed assets
29. A situation in which if one project is implemented the other(s) will not be.
Line-item budget
Accrued expenses
Parent organization
Mutually exclusive projects
30. The budget that forecasts the operating and - in some cases - the non- operating revenues that will be earned during the budget period.
Permanently restricted net assets
Line-item budget
Revenue budget
Lender
31. The rise in an economy's general level of prices.
Inflation
Strategic decisions
Discount rate
Return on net assets
32. An entity that owns other companies.
Cash basis of accounting
For-profit
Parent organization
Operating income
33. Ratios designed to answer the question: How profitable is the organization?
Profitability ratios
Net present value
Payback
Deferred revenues
34. Ratios that answer the question: How well is the organization positioned to meet its short-term obligations?
Liquidity ratios
Activity Based Costing
Book value
Accrual basis of accounting
35. 1) The returns that must be generated on a project to compensate the organization for its risk. 2) The returns the organization is foregoing by investing its money in one project as opposed to an alternative of similar risk. See also Cost of capital.
Bond rating agency
Fixed assets
Discount rate
Non-current liabilities
36. The category of assets summarizing the amount of the major capital investments of the facility in plant - property - and equipment (PP&E). Plant means buildings - property is land - and equipment includes a wide variety of durable items from beds to
Fixed assets
SWOT analysis
Capital investment decisions
Properties and equipment
37. Assets minus Liabilities. One of the three major categories on the balance sheet. Traditionally known as stockholders' equity in investor-owned organizations and fund balance in not-for-profit organizations. In not-for-profit health care organization
Expansion decisions
Accumulated depreciation
Capital financing
Net Assets
38. One of the four major financial statements. It explains the changes in net assets from one period to the next on the balance sheet. Also called statement of changes in owners' equity in a for-profit business.
Line-item budget
MV
Investment grade
Statement of changes in net assets
39. One of the four major financial statements. It answers the question: Where did our cash come from and where did it go during the accounting period?
Statement of cash flows
Expense volume variance
Cash equivalents
Properties and equipment
40. Activity-based costing. A method to determine the costs of a service - product - or customer by tracing the resources consumed. ABC focuses on: I) controlling as well as calculating costs - 2) tracing as opposed to allocating costs - and 3) the impor
ABC
Donor
Acid test ratio
Amortization of a loan
41. Financial obligations that will be paid off over a time period longer than one year
Capital structure ratios
Non-current liabilities
Step-down method
Controlling activities
42. Organizational units responsible for providing health care related services to clients - patients - or enrollees - and the related costs thereof.
Accumulated depreciation
Short-term financing
Clinical cost centers
Comparative approach
43. [net assets/total assets)- This ratio reflects the proportion of total assets financed by equity. In for-profit organizations it is called the equity to total asset ratio and is calculated using the formula [owners' equity/total assets).
Net assets to total assets
Investment grade
Mission statement
Financing activities
44. {current liabilities/[(total expenses
Lender
Performance budget
Average payment period
Precautionary purposes
45. A benefit paid for in advance (rent - insurance - etc.). Also called prepaid expense.
Revenue enhancement
Prepaid assets
Cash basis of accounting
Non-current liabilities
46. The unit of service which we wish to know the cost for (hospital admission - classroom hour - course - etc.)
Float
Statement of operations
Final cost object
Balance sheet
47. The balance sheet category that includes actual money on hand as well as money equivalents - such as savings and checking accounts. It excludes cash restricted as to its use for something other than current operations.
Other revenues
Cash and cash equivalents
Top-down budgeting
Mortgage
48. The method of capital budgeting that compares the cash flows resulting from continuing with the existing alternative to those that would result if the equipment were replaced.
Comparative approach
Transaction
Depreciation
Accountability
49. The central document of the planning/control cycle. It identifies revenues and resources that will be needed by an organization to achieve its goals and objectives.
Top-down budgeting
Prepaid assets
Investor
Budget
50. Responsibility centers responsible for making a certain return on investments.
Investment centers
Operating cash flows
Net accounts receivable
Lien