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A company reports pretax accounting income of $10 million, but because of a single temporary difference, taxable income is $12 million. No temporary differences existed at the beginning of the year, and the tax rate is 40%. Prepare the appropriate journal entry to record income taxes.

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Final answer:

To record income taxes with a pretax accounting income of $10 million, taxable income of $12 million, and a tax rate of 40%, a company must debit Income Tax Expense for $4 million, credit Income Taxes Payable for $4.8 million, and debit Deferred Tax Liability for $800,000.

Step-by-step explanation:

When a company reports pretax accounting income of $10 million and a taxable income of $12 million due to a single temporary difference with a tax rate of 40%, the journal entries to record income taxes will reflect deferred tax liability. The company would first calculate the income tax expense on the accounting income, which would be $10 million multiplied by 40%, resulting in $4 million. This amount represents the income tax expense reported on the income statement.

The company would also recognize a deferred tax liability for the difference in accounting and taxable income, which is $2 million ($12 million taxable income minus $10 million pretax accounting income). The deferred tax liability would be the $2 million difference multiplied by the 40% tax rate, resulting in $800,000. This recognizes that the company will owe additional taxes in the future when the temporary difference reverses.

Therefore, the journal entry would be:


  • Debit Income Tax Expense for $4 million

  • Credit Income Taxes Payable for $4.8 million

  • Debit Deferred Tax Liability for $800,000

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