P7 4 (Bad Debt Reporting) From inception of operations to December 31, 2012, Fortner Corporation provided for uncollectible accounts receivable under the allowance method: provisions were made monthly at 2% of credit sales; bad debts written off were charged to the allowance account; recoveries of bad debts previously written off were credited to the allowance account; and no year end adjustments to the allowance account were made. Fortner’s usual credit terms are net 30 days. The balance in Allowance for Doubtful Accounts was $130,000 at January 1, 2012. During 2012, credit sales totaled $9,000,000, interim provisions for doubtful accounts were made at 2% of credit sales, $90,000 of bad debts were written off, and recoveries of accounts previously written off amounted to $15,000.

Fortner installed a computer system in November 2012, and an aging of accounts receivable was prepared for the first time as of December 31, 2012. A summary of the aging is as follows.

Classification by Month of Sale

Balance in Each Category

Estimated % Uncollectible

November–December 2012

$1,080,000

2%

July–October

650,000

10%

January–June

420,000

25%

Prior to 1/1/12

150,000

80%

 

$2,300,000

Based on the review of collectibility of the account balances in the “prior to 1/1/12” aging category, additional receivables totaling $60,000 were written off as of December 31, 2012. The 80% uncollectible estimate applies to the remaining $90,000 in the category. Effective with the year ended December 31, 2012, Fortner adopted a different method for estimating the allowance for doubtful accounts at the amount indicated by the year end aging analysis of accounts receivable.

Instructions

(a) Prepare a schedule analyzing the changes in Allowance for Doubtful Accounts for the year ended December 31, 2012 Show supporting computations in good form. (Hint: In computing the 12/31/12 allowance, subtract the $60,000 write off).

(b) Prepare the journal entry for the year end adjustment to the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts balance as of December 31, 2012.