Help on Governmental Question

  • Creator
    Topic
  • #2956460
    FutureCPA123
    Participant

    Hi, I am stuck on this question:

    A government has the following debt:

    Capital lease liabilities that mature in more than one year (General Fund department leases)-$2,000,000.
    Net pension liability associated with general government employees-$4,000,000.
    General government bonds that mature in the next fiscal year-$14,000,000.
    What amount of debt should be reported in the long-term liabilities in the government-wide financial positions?

    A. $2,000,000
    B. $6,000,000
    C. $18,000,000
    D. $20,000,000

    Why is it D. $20 million? I thought net pension liability is a fiduciary fund. Also, wouldn’t the general governmental bonds of $14 million be current…? I selected A. I know that Governmental-Wide is only Government & Business activities. I’ve read the ‘Unmatured long-term debt’ section too and I’m still confused.

    AUD - 82
    BEC - 77
    FAR - 84
    REG - 80
    Push yourself, because nobody else is going to do it for you.
Viewing 2 replies - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Replies
  • #2956742
    Shannon
    Participant

    In the Governmental Funds chapter, page 19, Long Term debt – long term liabilities include unmatured principal of bonds, and pensions (which is a noncurrent liability).

    Long term liability – Capital lease liabilities that mature in more than one year

    Long term (noncurrent) liability – Net pension liability associated with general government employees

    Long term liability (due to being “unmatured” – still considered long term) – General government bonds that mature in the next fiscal year

    In the Governmental Reporting chapter, page 38, it has a Governmental-Wide Statement of Net Position example which shows “Long Term Liabilities” to include those due within one year.

    AUD - NINJA in Training
    BEC - NINJA in Training
    FAR - NINJA in Training
    REG - NINJA in Training
    "If you wish to improve, be content to be thought foolish and stupid." -Epictetus
    #2956778
    DocJ
    Participant

    “I thought net pension liability is a fiduciary fund.”

    True, the Pension Fund is Fiduciary, but it's still technically a liability. You still gotta pay that stuff out to your employees.

    “wouldn't the general governmental bonds of $14 million be current”

    Just guessing here, but my understanding is that bonds are always non-current. They have current and non-current portions, but as long as there's any non-current portion, then it falls under non-current. Also, the way it's worded seems like it could be interpreted as long term. It said the bonds mature NEXT year, not this year.

Viewing 2 replies - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.