Answer:
a. Debit Bad debt expense $3,000
Credit Allowance for doubtful debt $3,000
Being entries to record additional bad debt expense
b. Debit Bad debt expense $5,000
Credit Allowance for doubtful debt $5,000
Being entries to record allowance for doubtful debt
Step-by-step explanation:
A company can either makes sales on account or by cash collection. When sales is made on account, the entries posted are debit accounts receivable and credit sales.
To account for receivables that may be incollectible, debit bad debit expense and credit allowance for doubtful debt. Should the debt become uncollectible (i.e go bad), debit allowance for doubtful debt and credit accounts receivable.
Where a debit that had previously been determined to have gone bad gets settled, debit cash and credit bad debt expense.
Net sales is the difference between total sales and sales returns, allowances.
Net sales = $900,000 - $50,000
= $850,000
Given that
a. Duncan Company estimates bad debts at 5% of accounts receivable,
Bad debt = 5% * $100,000
= $5,000
Since the allowance for doubtful debt already has a credit balance of $2,000, additional provisioning required
= $5,000 - $2,000
= $3,000
b. 5% of accounts receivable but Allowance for Doubtful Accounts had a $1,500 debit balance.
The $1,500 represents the amount written off during the year. This will have no effect on the allowance to be made at year end.