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write my assignment 31186

Pre-adjustment trial balance of The DJ Traders for the year ended 31 March 2017  

                                                                                                                                                          Debit (R)                              Credit (R) 

Capital – 1 April 2016                                                                                                                                                                  325 000.00 

Drawings                                                                                                                                           1 625.00 

Land and buildings                                                                                                                        438 750.00  

Furniture and equipment                                                                                                               146 250.00  

Motor vehicles                                                                                                                               152 750.00  

Accumulated depreciation: Furniture and equipment – 1 April 2016                                                                                            23 400.00 

Accumulated depreciation: Motor vehicles – 1 April 2016                                                                                                            21 385.00 

Fixed deposit (Havana)                                                                                                                   39 000.00  

Bank                                                                                                                                                  8 450.00  

Debtors control                                                                                                                                14 625.00  

Allowance for credit losses – 1 April 2016                                                                                                                                           438.75 

Allowance for settlement discount granted – 1 April 2016                                                                                                                   175.50 

Petty cash                                                                                                                                          1 787.50  

Trading inventory                                                                                                                               8 937.50  

Mortgage loan                                                                                                                                                                                162 500.00 

Creditors control                                                                                                                                                                               17 225.00 

Cash float                                                                                                                                          4 387.50  

Rent deposit                                                                                                                                    16 250.00  

Credit card account                                                                                                                                                                          46 637.50 

SARS (UIF/SDL/PAYE)                                                                                                                                                                    11 862.50 

Sales                                                                                                                                                                                               599 657.50 

Sales returns                                                                                                                                    26 422.50  

Cost of Sales                                                                                                                                  289 181.75  

Service income                                                                                                                                                                                  36 562.50 

Interest on fixed deposit                                                                                                                                                                    11 375.00 

Rent income                                                                                                                                                                                      28 112.50 

Interest on debtors accounts                                                                                                                                                               5 362.50 

Credit losses recovered                                                                                                                                                                       2 762.50 

Electricity                                                                                                                                          11 635.00  

Credit losses                                                                                                                                      3 965.00  

Fuel                                                                                                                                                    7 085.00  

Postage and stationery                                                                                                                      1 755.00  

Cleaning materials                                                                                                                             3 152.50  

Insurance                                                                                                                                           6 922.50  

Advertising expenses                                                                                                                        9 327.50  

Interest on creditors accounts                                                                                                           2 827.50  

Rent expense                                                                                                                                    5 005.00  

Bank charges                                                                                                                                    1 495.00  

Repairs and maintenance                                                                                                                 5 330.00  

Wages and salaries                                                                                                                         85 540.00   

                                                                                                                                                    1 292 456.75                                   1 292 456.75

Additional information and adjustments as at 31 March 2017:

1. Provide for depreciation as follows:  On furniture and equipment: 16% per annum on cost. Note that a new equipment costing R22 500.00, was bought on July 1, 2016. This has been properly recorded. 

On motor vehicles: 14% per annum on the reducing balance method.

2. A debtor, R. Todd, who owed R658.13, has been declared insolvent. The business received 45 cents in the rand from the insolvent estate. This transaction must still be recorded. Write the rest of the debt off as irrecoverable.

3. An allowance for credit losses of 2.50% of trade receivables should be maintained. Adjust the allowance for settlement discount granted to 3.50% of good book debtors.

4. R207.03 has been recovered in cash from a debtor whose account had previously been written off as irrecoverable. No entry has been made as yet.

5. The electricity expense for March 2017 has not yet been paid, R1 057.73.

6. Insurance for April 2017 has been prepaid, R532.50.

7. Service income has not been received for March 2017, R3 323.86.

8. The rent income for April 2017 has been received already, R2 162.50.

9. An invoice for R564.00 has been received from Tele-Advertising for advertising expenses. This transaction has not yet been recorded.

10. An amount of R541.00 was paid to Moray Garage for delivery (by rail) of trading inventory to the business. This was debited to the fuel account in error (which has not yet been corrected). The inventory to which the railage applies has not yet been sold.

11. The owner took trading inventory for personal use. The selling price was R812.00 (VAT is not applicable). The mark up is 45% on cost price. The transaction must still be processed.

12. The stock take revealed the following items on hand:  Trading inventory – R7 937.47  Postage and stationery – R912.60  Cleaning materials – R1 733.88

13. Provide for the interest on the mortgage loan. Interest is calculated at 13% per annum. The liability was re-paid (redeemed) by R40 000.00 on December 1, 2016. There were no other additional loans or repayments during the financial year, but twelve end-of month instalments of R1 489.58 each are due to be repaid on the loan, starting at the end of April 2017.

Note: The owner made no further capital contributions during the year in question.

You are required to:

A) Prepare the statement of profit and loss and other comprehensive income for DJ traders for the year ended 31 March 2017.

B) draft the statement of financial position for DJ Traders as at 31March 2017.

NB: Show all workings

 

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write my assignment 24960

I will pay for the following essay Symbolism in Desiree’s Baby by Kate Chopin. The essay is to be 5 pages with three to five sources, with in-text citations and a reference page.

ave a child who grows to appear with a heritage as a ‘quadroon’, the happiness of their marriage is shattered and Desiree disappears into the bayou as Armand destroys the evidence of their love. In the end, a letter reveals that it is Armand who had a mother with the heritage that gave their child the appearance of a ‘quadroon’, not Desiree. The story of Desiree’s Baby written by Kate Chopin uses symbolism to show the way in which prejudice and slavery affect her characters and in order to discuss the nature of race, gender, and love in a compelling story with a surprise ending that challenges conceptions.

Because there is doubt about the origins of Desiree, there is a fear by the Valmondes, the people who took her in as she was left on their doorstep, that she will have a mixed race heritage. As she is loved by them, they do not care, but they fear for her life as a wife of a rich plantation owner who has many slaves. Although he implication of this is that she will be unacceptable as a wife for Armand who claims to not care because he loves her so much. Chopin writes that “Armand Aubigny riding by and seeing her there, had fallen in love with her. That was the way all the Aubignys fell in love, as if struck by a pistol shot” (Chopin 219). When she bears him a child who appears to be of mixed race, his heart turns on her and he drives her from their home.

The discussion that Chopin introduces is based upon the difficulties of identity and race as it was interpreted in the time contemporary to her writing. Armand loves her as long as he has no knowledge of her genetic history, but when he believes he has discovered that she has an ancestor that might be ‘black’, he turns on her and rejects this aspect of her identity. The imagery that Chopin evokes as he falls in love with Desiree evokes a violent and explosive idea through the “pistol shot” (Chopin 219). This is a foreboding of how the relationship will end as his powerful attraction to her

 

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write my assignment 10549

n Chapter 12 of The Public Policy of Crime and Criminal Justice, Marion and Oliver (2012) address numerous issues surrounding corrections such as the role of private prisons as a way to reduce prison overcrowding. To frame this discussion, you should consider the following questions:

  • What should we do about prison overcrowding?
  • What role will prisons play in the future?
  • Will the focus be punishment or treatment?
  • Does the state have a responsibility to train inmates with employment skills?
  • Should we allow inmate labor (prison industries) as a for-profit industry?

Initial Post: You will select a corrections policy issue addressed in one of your texts. Examine the issues surrounding the corrections policy issue, and determine the effects of the policy on the other components of the criminal justice system. Support your claims with examples from the required materials and/or other scholarly sources, and properly cite your references with both in-text and APA citation at the end of your post.

 

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write my assignment 7802

.Refer to Figure 22.3.1. In the above figure the country of Kemper is currently on the aggregate production function given by the line W-X. If in the country of Kemper the aggregate production function shifted to the line given by Y-Z, what would this shift represent and what factors would cause this shift occur? What impact would this shift have on labour demand and real wages? Fully explain your answer.

Real GDP (billions of 2002 dollars)WLabour (billions of hours per year)Figure 22.3.17) Refer to Figure 22.3.1. In the above figure the country of Kemper is currently on the aggregate production functiongiven by the line W-X. If in the country of Kemper the aggregate production function shifted to the line given by Y-Z,what would this shift represent and what fat factors would cause this shift occur? What impact would this shift have onlabour demand and real wages? Fully explain your answer. (4 Marks)

 

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