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Re: Rawnoc post# 171

Wednesday, 01/21/2015 12:02:42 AM

Wednesday, January 21, 2015 12:02:42 AM

Post# of 238
Too funny Raw. You should probably read the entries you quote before quoting them. You're not looking at cost of goods sold, but allocation of overhead, which is most definitely NOT a part of COGS. Understand now?
From your expert site, "Cost of goods sold is the cost of the merchandise that was sold to customers. The cost of goods sold is reported on the income statement when the sales revenues of the goods sold are reported.

A retailer's cost of goods sold includes the cost from its supplier plus any additional costs necessary to get the merchandise into inventory and ready for sale. For example, let's assume that Corner Shelf Bookstore purchases a college textbook from a publisher. If Corner Shelf's cost from the publisher is $80 for the textbook plus $5 in shipping costs, Corner Shelf reports $85 in its Inventory account until the book is sold. When the book is sold, the $85 is removed from inventory and is reported as cost of goods sold on the income statement."

wink

Competing is intense among humans, and within a group, selfish individuals always win. But in contests between groups, groups of altruists always beat groups of selfish individuals.
E. O. Wilson