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Test your basic knowledge |
ACCA Financial Management
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Study First
Subjects
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certifications
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business-skills
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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 percentage of each asset relative to total assets.
Other revenues
Budget variance
Asset mix
Market rate of interest
2. 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?
Administrative cost centers
Allocation
Statement of cash flows
Discounted cash flows
3. A contract in which the lessee (user) agrees to pay the leassor (owner) a specific amount over a period of time for the use of an asset.
Collections policies and procedures
Lien
Statement of changes in net assets
Lease
4. The budget used to forecast - and in some cases justify - the expenditures (and in some cases the sources of financing) for non-current assets.
Fixed (interest) rate debt
ROI
Budget variance
Capital budget
5. An entity that is owed money for lending funds or supplying goods or services on credit.
Long Term Solvency ratios
Matching principle
Revenue enhancement
Creditor
6. Organizational units responsible for providing administrative support at a profit to other organizational units or to the organization as a whole and/or raising funds externally.
Collection float
Fixed asset turnover
Administrative profit centers
Cost of capital
7. Health maintenance organization. Entities that receive premium payments from enrollees with the understanding that the HMO will be financially responsible for all predefined health care required by its enrollees for a specified period of time. The he
MV
HMO
Periodic payments
Bond rating agency
8. [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).
Cash basis of accounting
Net assets to total assets
Liquidity
Issuer
9. Amounts due to the organization from patients - third parties - and others.
Accounts receivable
Single/Simple Step
Asset Management ratios
Allocation
10. Revenue is recorded when goods or services are delivered
Properties and equipment
Donor
Realization principle
Coupon
11. Costs that are traced to a cost object. See also Indirect costs and Cost object.
Direct costs
Expense volume variance
Accumulated depreciation
Investment centers
12. That process of budgeting where the environmental assessment and planning of future activities are largely decided upon by a few individuals - and the budget is essentially dictated to the rest of the organization. Often called authoritarian approach
Top-down budgeting
Long-term investments
ABC
Allocation base
13. [(cash + marketable securities + net accounts receivable)/current liabilities)- A measure of the organization's liquidity.
Quick ratio
Expense volume variance
Certainty
Income from investments
14. [(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
Times interest earned
Perpetuity
Contribution margin
Beginning inventory
15. The difference between the initial amount paid for an investment and the related future cash inflows after they have been adjusted (discounted) by the cost of capital.
Financing mix
G & A expenses
Capital assets
Net present value
16. The elapsed time between financial statements. Common accounting periods
Accounting period
FV
Non-operating income
Responsibility center
17. I) Calculating interest using the compound interest method. 2) Adjusting for the time value of money forward in time to a future value. See also Compound interest method and Discounting.
Depreciation
Bond rating agency
Current assets
Compounding
18. 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
Hedge
Cash flows from investing activities
Budget variance
IRR
19. The idea that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar in the future.
Parent organization
Liquidity
Final cost object
Time value of money
20. If a project is undertaken - these cash flows are the indirect increases or decreases in cash flows that will occur elsewhere in the organization.
Spillover cash flows
Net assets to total assets
Liabilities
Cost of capital
21. The process of distributing service center costs to mission centers - to determine the full cost of each mission center
Lease
Prepaid assets
Allocation
Administrative cost centers
22. A category of income that includes unrestricted interest - dividends - and gains from the sale of unrestricted investments.
Transaction
Statement of changes in net assets
Income from investments
Creditor
23. Opposite of the authoritarian approach. The roles and responsibilities of the budgeting process are diffused throughout the organization. Often called the participatory approach.
Long-term debt to net assets ratio
Fixed costs
Present value of an annuity
Top-down/bottom-up approach
24. A transaction that reduces the risk of an investment.
Donor
Beginning inventory
Hedge
Annuity
25. The rise in an economy's general level of prices.
Compounding
Inflation
Current liabilities
Direct costs
26. Assets that have a useful life greater than one year - such as plant - property - and equipment. Plant and equipment are depreciated over time; land (property) is not.
Capital assets
Centralization
Leverage
SWOT analysis
27. Financing that will be paid back in less than one year.
Capital investment decisions
Accounts receivable
Asset Management ratios
Short-term financing
28. Activities that provide guidance and feedback to keep the organization within its budget - such as staff meetings - regular reports - and bonuses.
Average payment period
Properties and equipment
Controlling activities
Expenses
29. Costs that stay the same in total over the relevant range as volume increases - but that change inversely on a per unit basis.
Fixed costs
Equity financing
Revenue rate variance
Temporarily restricted net assets
30. A section of the statement of cash flows used to report such activities as borrowing and paying back loans.
Profit margin
Final cost object
Financing activities
Return on net assets
31. [(actual cost per unit -budgeted cost per unit) x actual volume).- The difference between the variable expenses that would have been expected at the actual volume and those actually incurred.
FTE
Collections policies and procedures
Clinical cost centers
Expense cost variance
32. A measure of the resources used to generate revenue and/or provide a service. Often used synonymously with costs. See also Costs.
Expenses
Expense budget
Accounting period
Net accounts receivable
33. The difference between what was planned (budgeted) and what was achieved (actual).
G & A expenses
Budget variance
Short-term financing
IRR
34. Setting aside cash to meet unexpected demands - such as unexpected maintenance of a facility or piece of equipment.
Precautionary purposes
Spillover cash flows
IRR
Donation
35. 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.
Interest
Float
Operating revenues
Billing float
36. Each service center
Mail float
Other income
Single/Simple Step
Efficiency
37. How an organization chooses to finance its working capital needs.
Financing mix
Annuity
Product diversity
Amortization of a loan
38. 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.
Statement of cash flows
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
Billing - collections - and disbursement policies and procedures
Coupon rate
39. The ability of an organization to find new ways to operate that obviate the need for certain classes of costs - such as doing procedures on an outpatient rather than inpatient basis.
Cost avoidance
Capital assets
Capital financing
Prepaid assets
40. Previously restricted assets no longer restricted because the terms of the restriction have been met.
Cost avoidance
Statement of operations
Equity financing
Net assets released from restriction
41. An estimate/measure of how much a tangible asset (such as plant or equipment) has been "used up" during an accounting period. It is an expense that does not require any cash outflow under the accrual basis of accounting. See also Accumulated deprecia
Disbursement float
Depreciation
Cost centers
Operating margin
42. The rate of return required to undertake a project. Also called the hurdle rate or discount rate.
Cost of capital
Mortgage
Realization principle
Revenues
43. 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.
Net assets released from restriction
Bonds
Mortgage bonds
FV
44. The amount of inventory on hand at the beginning of an accounting period. See also Ending inventory.
Mission Center
Issuer
Beginning inventory
Tangible assets
45. The unit of service which we wish to know the cost for (hospital admission - classroom hour - course - etc.)
Final cost object
Fixed Asset Turnover
Strategic decisions
Restricted donation
46. 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.
Bad debt
Loan amortization schedule
Statement of cash flows
Capital financing
47. Funds provided by a private entity or individual without the requirement of repayment. Donations can either be restricted or unrestricted.
Fixed (interest) rate debt
Notes payable
Donation
Top-down/bottom-up approach
48. 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
Amortization of a loan
Traditional profit centers
Compounding
Total asset turnover
49. Responsibility centers responsible for making a certain return on investments.
Investment centers
Other expenses
Single/Simple Step
Debt service coverage
50. Portion of the profits the organization keeps in-house to use in support of its mission.
Base Budget
Retained earnings
Contribution margin
Leverage