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ACCA Financial Management
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Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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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 method by which to distribute service center costs to mission centers; in general the one that most accurately measures use by the cost centers that receives its services (food service - # of meals - hospital laundry - # of pounds processed)
Issuer
Properties and equipment
Footnotes
Basis of Allocation
2. [Net Accounts Receivable/(Revenue/356)]
Restricted donation
Debt to equity
Contribution margin
Average Days Receivable
3. Costs that stay the same in total over the relevant range as volume increases - but that change inversely on a per unit basis.
Collection float
Financing activities
Fixed costs
Properties and equipment - net
4. The difference between current assets and current liabilities.
Debt service coverage
Operating revenues
Net working capital
Billing float
5. The bottom area of the financial statements that contains key information not available in the body of the statements - such as how charity is determined - the composition of investments - which assets are restricted - and the depreciation method.
Product diversity
Operating income
Footnotes
Loan amortization schedule
6. The delay between providing the service and getting the bill to the patient or third party. There are two aspects of billing float: assembling the bill and delivering the bill to the patient or third-party payor.
Performance budget
Billing float
Beginning inventory
Single/Simple Step
7. Cash inflows and outflows resulting from financing activities - such as obtaining grants or endowments - or from borrowing or paying back long-term debt.
Balance sheet
Operating cash flows
Cash flows from financing activities
Interest
8. 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.
Retained earnings
Parent organization
Discount rate
Donation
9. The degree of dispersion of responsibility within an organization. See also Centralization.
Total asset turnover
Temporarily restricted net assets
Excess of revenues over expenses
Decentralization
10. Amounts the organization is obligated to pay others - including suppliers and creditors.
Current assets
Accounts payable
Properties and equipment
Disbursement float
11. The system of accounting that recognizes revenues when cash is received and expenses when cash is paid out. See also Accrual basis of accounting.
Periodic payments
Cash basis of accounting
Non-current liabilities
Financing activities
12. A donation that has conditions which must be satisfied. See also Temporarily restricted net assets.
Billing - collections - and disbursement policies and procedures
Restricted donation
Comparative approach
Notes payable
13. Decisions regarding the acquisition of capital assets. The capital investment decision should be separate from the decision on how to finance capital assets.
Capital investment decisions
Lender
Fixed (interest) rate debt
Net Assets
14. I) Measuring inputs against outputs. 2) The cost of service per unit rendered.
Net assets released from restriction
Annuity
Non-regular cash flows
Efficiency
15. Literally non-movable assets. Generally used to refer to buildings and equipment.
Fixed assets
Line of credit
Net present value
Top-down/bottom-up approach
16. Price times total quantity.
Net assets released from restriction
Net assets to total assets
Total revenue
Accounts payable
17. Ratios that measure how the organization's assets are financed and/or whether the organization can take on new debt.
Net Assets
FTE
Capital structure ratios
Revenue enhancement
18. The bottom line in the statement of operations. It includes such items as operating and non-operating income - contributions of long-lived assets - transfers to parent - and extraordinary items.
Days cash on hand
Operating budget
Intermediate Cost Object
Increase in unrestricted net assets
19. A category of income that includes unrestricted interest - dividends - and gains from the sale of unrestricted investments.
Annuity
Disbursement float
Income from investments
Allowance for uncollectibles
20. The cost of a capital asset (i.e. building or equipment) minus accumulated depreciation.
Top-down budgeting
Incremental cash flows
Restricted donation
Book value
21. What a series of equal payments in the future is worth today taking into account the time value of money.
Other revenues
Administrative profit centers
Present value of an annuity
Equity financing
22. 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?
Capital appreciation
Bond rating agency
Statement of cash flows
Expenses
23. Portion of profit an organization distributes to investors. By law - only investor-owned health care organizations can distribute dividends outside the organization.
Non-operating ratio
Total asset turnover
Dividends
Effectiveness
24. Looks at the percentage change in a line item's value from one year to the next using the formula: [(subsequent year -base year)/base year) x 100. See also Vertical analysis.
Non-current liabilities
Horizontal analysis
Increase in unrestricted net assets
Activity ratios
25. The amount of time between when an organization receives a service and pays for it.
Expense cost variance
Income from investments
Cash flows from operating activities
Disbursement float
26. [total revenues/net plant & equipment]- This ratio measures the number of dollars generated for each dollar invested in an organization's plant and equipment.
Restricted donation
Liquidity
Intermediate Cost Object
Fixed asset turnover
27. When products are manufactured in batches in different sizes - and overhead activities are affected by the size of the batch being produced
Total revenue
Volume diversity
Temporarily restricted net assets
Lease
28. [(excess of revenues over expenses + interest expense)/interest expense].- This ratio enables creditors and lenders to evaluate an organization's ability to generate earnings necessary to meet interest expense requirements. In for-profit organization
Allowance for uncollectibles
Periodic payments
Top-down budgeting
Times interest earned
29. Assets that have restrictions on their use which will be removed either with the passage of time or the occurrence of some event.
Compounding
Temporarily restricted net assets
Cost of goods sold
Donation
30. Operating income not reported elsewhere under revenues - gains - and other support.
Expense cost variance
Other revenues
Single/Simple Step
Short-term financing
31. Future value. What an amount invested today (or a series of payments made over time) will be worth at a given time in the future using the compound interest method. This accounts for the time value of money. See also Present value.
FV
Net assets released from restriction
Cost of capital
Periodic payments
32. A statement intended to guide the organization into the future by identifying the unique attributes of the organization - why it exists - and what it hopes to achieve.
Dividends
Activity Based Costing
Mission statement
Bond rating
33. 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.
Strategic financial planning
Statement of changes in net assets
Average Days Receivable
Market rate of interest
34. Financial and non-financial standards against which organizational performance is measured.
Incremental cash flows
Performance measure
Discounted cash flows
Temporarily restricted net assets
35. Non-operating income.
Average Days Receivable
Operating budget
Other income
Profitability ratios
36. An organization's financial obligations that are to be paid within one year.
Lender
Prepaid assets
Current liabilities
Multiyear budget
37. A contract between a lender and a potential borrower preauthorizing the potential borrower's right to borrow up to a specific amount on request as long as they fulfill the terms and conditions of the contract. Also called a letter of credit.
Line of credit
Discount rate
Expansion decisions
Budget variance
38. (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;
Mail float
Return on net assets
Revenue rate variance
Hedge
39. The gradual process of paying off debt through a long series of equal periodic payments. Each payment covers a portion of the principal plus current interest. The periodic payments are equal over the lifetime of the loan - but the proportion going to
Mission Center
Clinical cost centers
Non-regular cash flows
Amortization of a loan
40. Tools used to increase the amount of cash available to the organization. The objective of billing - credit - and collection policies is to accelerate cash receipts; the objective of cash disbursement policies is to slow down cash outflows.
Administrative cost centers
Income from investments
Billing - collections - and disbursement policies and procedures
Expense cost variance
41. Cash flows that occur solely as a result of undertaking a project. Basically the marginal difference between alternatives.
Strategic decisions
Acid test ratio
Properties and equipment - net
Incremental cash flows
42. Gross proceeds less the underwriter's fee and other issuance fees.
Coupon rate
Parent organization
Controlling activities
Net proceeds from a bond issuance
43. Organizational units responsible for providing health care related services to clients - patients - or enrollees - and the related costs thereof.
Clinical cost centers
Expansion decisions
Single/Simple Step
Revenue budget
44. A schedule detailing the principal and interest payments required to repay a loan. Typically - the periodic payments remain unchanged - but the proportion used to payoff the principal increases over time.
Float
Expense budget
Loan amortization schedule
Fixed supplies budget
45. Organizational unit given the responsibility to carry out one or more tasks and/or achieve one or more outcomes.
Capital budget
Responsibility center
Activity Based Costing
Donation
46. Opposite of the authoritarian approach. The roles and responsibilities of the budgeting process are diffused throughout the organization. Often called the participatory approach.
Discount rate
Non-operating income
Parent organization
Top-down/bottom-up approach
47. {[cash + marketable securities)/[(operating expenses -depreciation)/ 365].- A ratio that indicates the number of days' worth of expenses an organization can cover with its most liquid assets (cash and marketable securities).
Total asset turnover
Days cash on hand
Coupon
Basis of Allocation
48. Organizational units responsible for providing services and controlling their costs. There are two major types: clinical cost centers and administrative cost centers.
Responsibility center
Cost centers
Accrued expenses
Operating activities
49. [long-term debt/net assets]- A measure of the proportion of an organization's assets that are financed by debt as opposed to equity. In for-profit organizations - it is called the long-term debt to equity ratio and is calculated using the formula [lo
Cash basis of accounting
Discounted cash flows
Long-term debt to net assets ratio
Increase in unrestricted net assets
50. That point at which total revenues equal total costs. It is described by the equation: (price x volume) = fixed costs + (variable cost per unit x volume).
Cash basis of accounting
Days cash on hand
Net working capital
Breakeven point
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