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Title: Accounting principles
Description: basic principles of accounting

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ACCT 111 FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING NOTES
Definition of Accounting
Accounting is a process of three activities, namely
1
...

2
...
Recording consists of keeping a chronological
diary of measured events in an orderly and systematic manner
...

3
...
The information is communicated through the preparation of and distribution of
accounting reports, the most common of which are known as financial statements
...

Users of Accounting information
Accounting in the modern world is very important to the extent that even the smallest business entity
needs it
...
Managers
These are the day to day decision makers, they need to know how well things are progressing
financially and about the financial status of the business
...
Owners of the business (shareholders)
They want to be able to see whether the business is thriving or not
...

3
...

4
...

5
...

6
...

7
...

8
...


Types of accountants
One way to classify different types of accountants is to identify the kinds of organizations for which
they work for
...

1
...
A large business
might employ a hundred or more private accountants
...
Public accountant
Public accountants provide their services to many different clients
...

3
...
Some
government accountants perform accounting services for their employers
...

Another way to classify accountants is to identify the kind of work they do
...
These fields involve providing different kinds of information to various
types of users
...
Financial accounting
Financial accounting provides information to decision makers who are not involved in the
day-to-day operations of an organization
...
The information is distributed primarily through general purpose financial
statements
...
Financial accounting is governed by Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (GAAP), which consists of external standards which must be adhered
to
...

2
...
Managers use this information in their decision making, which leads to the
attainment of the objectives of the entity
...
However, managerial accounting
reports include information for internal use only
...


Tax accounting
The field of tax accounting deals mainly with tax issues
...
Tax regulations are written by accountants
practising in this field and hence, they also investigate any violation of tax laws
...
Types of accountants and the fields in which they practice in
...

While bookkeeping is critical to accounting, it is only the clerical part of the accounting process
...


3

Accounting on the other hand, is concerned with identifying how transactions and events should be
described in financial reports
...

Thus the work of the accountant is much broader than bookkeeping
...


FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Financial statements communicate accounting information to managers and other decision makers
...


Types of financial statements
The main purpose of financial statements is to provide information to a wide range of users
...
Income statement
The statement of comprehensive income provides information on the performance of a
business
...
Net income
is earned if the company revenues exceeds it expenditure
...

Income


Income consists of both revenue and gains
...
g sales, legal fees, tuition fees etc
...
g salaries, wages, rent etc

4

2
...


The balance sheet shows the financial position of a business on a specific date by listing the assets,
liabilities and owner’s equity
...

Assets definition 2: A resource controlled by the entity as a result of past events and from which
future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity’
Assets are divided into non-current assets and current assets
...
e
...

Current assets
These are assets that are owned by an entity for one year or less
...
g cash, stock, debtors,
prepayments etc
...

OR
These are amounts owed by the business to other firms
...

Liabilities are divided into two:
Non-current liabilities
Current liabilities
Equity: residual interest in the assets that remain after deducting its liabilities
...
Statement of changes in owners’ equity
The statement of changes in equity provides information about how the equity of a
company has changed over the period
...

4
...


Legal forms of business
a) sole proprietorship- owned by one person and is not organised under state or federal laws as a
corporation legally a single proprietorship does not have a separate existence apart from its owners
...
All
that is required is for the partners to agree to operate a business together
...

c) Corporation- a separate legal entity formed /incorporated under the laws of a state or federal
governments
...
You may well ask “Why?
Accounting is supposed to be a practical subject”
...

The techniques used in the practice of accounting are based on conceptual and theoretical ideas
...

Accounting policy
Situations often occur in our everyday life which are repetitive (ie they are always the same) but they would
each have a different outcome if we acted differently each time
...
Our friends would think we were
unreliable
...

We encounter precisely the same situation in accounting
...
Accounting policy is thus a set of decisions about how the entity will treat
the same type of transactions in order to achieve a consistent result
...
For example, an entity has to indicate
what basis it has used to deal with the depreciation of property, plant and equipment
...

How It Works/Example:
GAAP principles, which are updated regularly to reflect the latest accounting methodologies,
are the definitive source of accounting guidelines that companies rely on when preparing
their financial statements
...

GAAP rules and procedures are what govern corporate accountants when they present the
details of a company's financial operations
...
However, GAAP
rules are sometimes subject to different interpretations, and unscrupulous companies often
find a way to bend or manipulate them to their advantage
...
balance sheets or income statements or
annual reports
...
A widely accepted set of rules, conventions, standards,
and procedures for reporting financial information, as established by the Financial Accounting
Standards Board
...
Official sources for these principles began with American Institute
of Certified Public Accounts (AICPA), whose Accounting Principles Board issued 31 formal
opinions
...
Strongly
independent accounting professionals from public, governmental, industrial and educational sectors,
FASB has issued many statements of Financial Accounting Standards
...
Both official standards
and practices generally followed by the profession are summarized below:

ACCOUNTING ENTITY CONCEPT
An economic unit, which may be a person, business, government, organization, or part thereof, is
being accounted for
...
Liquidation value may be ignored
...


COST PRINCIPLE
Income Statement and Balance Sheet accounts must be recorded at cost, as evidenced by their
objective fair market value at time of acquisition, called historical costs, these figures, to the dismay
of some, are generally not adjusted to current market value
...
For
a retailing business, point of sale easily establishes when earned, for manufacturing construction
businesses, the process is more complicated
...
it is realized
2
...
it is earned
Revenues are realized when goods and services are exchanged for cash or claims to cash (receivables)
Revenues are realizable when assets received in exchange are readily convertible to known amounts
of cash or claims to cash (short-term investments)
...
e when the earnings process is complete or virtually complete
...


OBJECTIVITY PRINCIPLE
To be reliable, accounting information must be objective
...

MATERIALITY
Accounting principles need not be followed when the effect of this action is immaterial and would not
affect the reader’s interpretation of the accounting information
...
Some information, such as
contingent liability, is easily communicated with a footnote, while other information, such as the
effect of inflation, requires more complex procedures
...

CONSERVATISM
Estimates requiring subjective analysis should not overstate revenue and asset values or understate
expenses and liabilities
...
Because the dollar is not stable, larger corporations, at
FASB’s request, voluntarily prepare information on the effects of inflation on their financial
statements
...

The IASB’s conceptual framework is known as the Conceptual Framework for Financial
Reporting 2010 (‘the Framework’)
...


Framework for the preparation and presentation of financial statements
The framework represents the main ideas, concepts and principles upon which all International
Financial Reporting Standards, and therefore financial statements, are based
...

These are:
1
...
The going concern

9

Qualitative characteristic of financial statements

The four main qualitative characteristics are:
1
...
The readers of the information
should be able to follow the presentations easily
...
Relevance
Accounting information should be relevant
...
Predictive value helps users forecast future events
...

3
...
To be reliable, accounting information must be verifiable – we must
be able to prove that it is free of error and bias
...

4
...

Consistency means that a company uses the same accounting principles and methods from
year to year
...

The global nature of business creates a major accounting problem
The problem is that each country has its own unique accounting standards
...

International standards consist of the following:
International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs)
o These are issued by the International Accounting Standards Board
...

o When the IASB was formed it adopted the IAS’s created by the IASC
...


The IFRS Foundation (‘the Foundation’




The IFRS Foundation is an independent not-for profit foundation based in the US
...

They are also responsible for setting and approving the budgets of the various bodies,
determining strategic direction and promoting IFRS
...

The IASB’s objectives are:
- to develop a single set of high quality, global accounting standards that
require transparent and comparable information in general purpose
financial statements
- to promote the use and rigorous application of those standards; and
- to work actively with national standard setters to bring about convergence of national
accounting standards and IFRSs
...

• They provide timely guidance on:
- newly identified financial reporting issues not specifically covered by an
accounting standard
- unsatisfactory interpretations that have developed or may develop
...


Their overall objectives are:
- to give advice to the IASB on agenda decisions and priorities
- to inform the IASB of the views of organisations and individuals, and
- to give other advice to the IASB or the Trustees
...

The accounting equation forms the basis on which financial accounting lies
...
It reviews the assets of the business:
i
...


From the point of view of their value
...


Where there is no external borrowing capital should be equal to the assets of the business
...


Show the effect of each transaction on assets, liabilities and capital
...
Owner pays capital into the bank
b
...
Buy inventory on credit
d
...
Sale of inventory for cash
f
...
Debtor pays money owing by cheque
h
...
Owner pays creditor private money outside the firm

Effect

2
...

Cash
=
$ 10 000
Debtors
=
30 000
Buildings
=
200 000
Fixtures and fittings
=
80 000
Creditors
=
50 000
Capital
=
?

3
...
Tambo is the owner of Ara Services which offers a carpet cleaning service
...
Clients owe $40 000 for services rendered and
Ara Services owes $20 000 for parts purchased
...

Calculate the equity
...

Accounting Process


Business
Transactions
Business
are comp
 transactions
Other (internal
events)

End result
Analyzing
economic events
and recording
their effects

Classifying and
summarizing the
recorded effects

Financial statement & other
reports presented to
economic decision makers
...

Some economic events affect an entity’s accounting equation even though they are not transactions with outside
parties e
...
e the
economic benefit of the machine is partially used out
...
g receipts and
invoices, debit and credit note, bank statement, cheque requisition, purchase order, employee’s earning record
...
Objectivity
adds to the reliability of accounting information
...
These locations
in the accounting system are called ACCOUNTS
...
A separate account is used for each revenue and expense item that appears on the
income statements
...
e customers and suppliers)
...

Real accounts – accounts in which possessions are recorded
...
g buildings, machinery, fixtures and inventory
...


Double entry system



States that every transaction should be recorded twice (once Dr entry and once Cr entry)
...

This follows from the fact that all business transaction affect two accounts simultaneously, where one
account can be seen as a giver and the other as a receiver
...

Cr the giver, Dr the receiver



When a business fails to maintain double entry, its records are recorded as incomplete and they don’t
balance
...





Sales ledger
...
This is for suppliers’ personal accounts
...
This contains the remaining double entry accounts, such as those relating to
expenses, non-current assets and capital
...


Using a T account
Place the name of the item recorded
Dr side






Cr side

In accounting the left side is called the Debit side and the right side is called the Credit side
...
When amounts are entered on the right side they are called credits and the account is said
to be credited
...

It is a debit balance when the sum of the debits exceeds the sum of the credits
...


Double entry system for capital, liabilities and assets
In the books if accounts of a business, liabilities are represented by a Cr balance and assets by a Dr balance
...

To come up with a journal (format):
1
...
Name of the accounts involved
3
...
An explanation of the transaction

What is posting?


It is the process of copying journal entry information from a journal to a legder
...


a
...

c
...

e
...

g
...

i
...


Complete the following table

Bought lorry for cash
Paid creditor, T lake, by cheque
Repaid P Logan’s loan by cash
Sold lorry for cash
Bought office machinery on credit from Ultra Ltd
A debtor, A Hill, pays us by cash
A, debtor J Cross, pays us by cheque
Proprietor puts a further amount into the business by cheque
A loan of $200 in cash is received from L Lowe
Paid creditor, D Lords, by cash

19

Account to
“be Debited

Account to
“be Credited”

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2
...

1
2
5
6
10
11
12
19
21
22
30
31

Bought goods on credit $220 from D Small
...

Sold goods on credit to D Hughes for $60
...
Spencer for $45
...
Small
...

Goods bought for cash $150
...
Spencer returned $16 worth of goods to Spink Ltd
...

Paid cash to D
...

D
...

Bought goods on credit for $214 from A
...


Required:
Journalize the above transactions, post them to the general ledger and extract a trial balance as at 31 May 2012
...

- It is a list of accounts and their balances at any given time
...

2
...

4
...

6
...

8
...
They are however some errors
which when done the trail balance agreement will still be observed
...

Error of omission
This exists when a transaction is completely omitted from the books of accounts of the business
...
g
...
Smart on 5January 2010 were neither recorded in J
...


20

Error of commission
This occurs when a transaction is recorded or posted to the wrong personal account but of the same category as
the correct account
...
Webster $120 but instead recorded the
transaction is G
...

Error of principle
This is an error which is committed as a result of failure to observe the correct principle of accounts
...
Instead of opening up a fixtures account / in case of buying a
fixed asset / one opens a purchase account
...
e
...
On 7 January 2011, X Company made sales of $560 cash but instead recorded this in the
sales account as $500
...
Jones but
recorded this in the purchase account as $830
...
i
...
when an account that was supposed to be debited
is credited and an account that was supposed to be credited is debited
...
g
...

Transposition error
This occurs when wrong sequence of the individual characters within a number was entered, e
...


Procedures in correcting the above errors
1
...

3
...


EXAMPLES
Error of commission
A sale of goods worth $678 to J Harris had been entered to J
...

Error of Omission
The sale of $59 worth of goods to R
...

Error of Commission
A purchase of $44 worth of goods from C
...
Munda’s
account
...

Error of Principle
The purchase of a machine for $200 is debited to purchases account instead of being debited to machinery
account
...


21

Error of original entry
A sale of $38 to A Smiles was entered in the books as $28
...
Mcloud costing $56 was entered in the books as $65
...


PREPERATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
-

Every firm likes to measure the performance of its operations in terms of profits or loss
...

In order to ascertain its income and also access the position of assets and liabilities, financial
statements are prepared,
Financial statements are also known with the traditional name as final accounts
...

Dr
Cash
Merchandise Inventory
Office supplies expense
Store equipment expense
Prepaid insurance expense
Office equipment
Accumulated depreciation – office equipment
Accounts Payable
Store equipment
Accumulated Depreciation – Store equipment
Capital: D
...
Walker
Sales
Sales returns & allowances
Sales discount (discount allowed)
Purchases
Purchases returns & allowances
Purchases discount (discount received)
Transportation in (carriage inwards)
Sales salaries expense
Rent expense – Selling spares
Advertising expense
Office salaries expense
Rent expense – Office

Cr

2 400
61 152
438
1 410
3 276
10 644
3 840
8 766
38 178
15 372
72 540
32 400
342 774
2 094
3 816
205 650
1 332
5 292
1 158
38 304
23 220
684
22 356
2 736
449 916

Additional information
i
...

ii
...

iii
...


22

449 916

Required:
1
...

3
...

Prepare a statement of changes in owner’s equity as at 31 December 2011
...


The Window Store
Trading, Profit & Loss Account
for the year ended 31 December 2011
Sales
Less: Sales returns & allowances
Turnover
Less: Cost of Goods Sold
Opening stock
Add: Purchases
Less: Purchases returns
Add: Carriage inwards
Goods available for sale
Less: Closing stock
Gross profit
Add: Discount received

$342 774
2 094
340 680

$ 61 152
$205 650
1 332
204 318
1 158

Less: Expenses
Office supplies
Store supplies
Prepaid insurance
Depreciation – Store equipment
Depreciation – Office equipment
Discount allowed
Sales salaries expense
Rent expenses: Selling spares
Office
Advertising
Office salaries expense
Net Profit

205 476
266 628
62 784

438
1 410
3 276
3 816
690
3 816
38 304
23 220
2 736
684
22 356

23

203 844
136 836
5 292
142 128

100 746
41 382

Opening capital
Add: Net profit
Less: Drawings
Closing capital

Statement of changes in Owner’s Equity
$72 540
41 382
113 922
32 400
81 522

Window Store
Balance Sheet
As at 31 December 2011

Non - Current Assets
Office equipment
Store equipment

Cost

Accumulated
Depreciation

Net Book Value

$10 644
38 178
48 822

$ 4 530
19 188
23 718

$ 6 114
18 990
25 104

Current Assets
Closing stock
Cash

62 784
2 400
65 184

Current Liabilities
Accounts payable
Working capital

8 766
56 418
81 522

Equity
Financed by: D
...

However the financial progress of a firm needs to be determined at any time
...
To accomplish this, the
accounting process is based on a time period principle
...

Since the division of the life of a business into time periods is done for accounting purposes, the time
periods are called accounting periods
...
The specific
12month period that a business adopts as its annual period is called a fiscal year
...


Accruals
These are the expenses attributable to the current accounting period but which have not yet been paid
...
Such expenses should be accounted for in the period when they are incurred
...

Example 1
The financial year of ABC Company is from January to December
...
At the beginning of the financial period, the office supplies account had a debit balance of $2 000
...
At the end of the year, the physical count of
office supplies revealed that there was $2 500 worth of supplies still on hand
...
At the beginning ABC received $3 000 from a client before supplying The Great Hope books the
client needed
...
No adjustment has
been done
...
The prepaid insurance account had a $1 760 debit balance at the end of the accounting period before
adjustments for expired insurance
...

4
...

5
...

Required: Prepare adjusting entries for the above transactions
...
Expired insurance $800
...
Unused framing supplies $5 100
...
Estimated depreciation of framing equipment $1 300
...
Earned but unpaid salaries $500
...

Among the different assets we have covered cash is more liquid than the other assets
...

All assets can be evaluated in terms of their relevant liquidity

Current assets
cash/bank
debtors
stock
prepayments

26



Assets such as cash are the most liquid assets because they can be easily converted into other types of
assets or used to buy services or pay liabilities
...
e
...
he or she commonly buys all the assets and services used
in the business
...

However, as the business grows it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain this close personal contact
...

The procedures that control the operations of a business make up its internal control system
...

ii
...


Advantages of an internal control system
A properly designed internal control system encourages adherence to prescribed managerial policies
...


Specific internal control procedures vary from company to company and depend on such factors as the nature of
the business and the size
...
The
broad principles are:

1
...
When responsibility is not clearly spelled out, it is difficult to determine who is at
fault when something goes wrong
...
g when two sales clerks share access to the same cash register and there is
a shortage, it may not be possible to tell which clerk is at fault
...

The problem may be solved by having different cash registers for each operator
...
Maintain adequate records
A good record keeping system helps protect assets and ensures that employees follow prescribed procedures
...
E
...

Numerous pre-printed forms and internal business papers shall be designed and properly used to maintain good
eternal control
...
g if sales slips are properly designed, sales personnel can record the needed information
efficiently without errors or delays to customers
...
As a result a salesperson is not able
to pocket cash by making a sale and destroying the sales slip
...
Insure assets and bond key employees
Assets should be covered by adequate casualty insurance, and employees who handle cash and negotiable assets
should be bonded
...
Bonding clearly reduces the loss suffered by theft
...
Separate record keeping and custody over assets
A fundamental principle of internal control is that the person who has access to or is otherwise responsible for
an asset should not maintain the accounting record for the asset
...
g the fixed asset register is kept in the
accounts office rather than by the maintenance department
...
Divide responsibility for a transactions
Responsibility for a transaction or a series of related transactions should be divided between individuals or
departments so that the work of one acts as a check on the other
...
Each employee or department should perform an unduplicated portion
...
g responsibility
for placing orders, receiving the merchandise, and paying the vendors should not be given to one individual or
department
...

And, designating a third person to approve the payment of the invoice offers additional protection
against error and fraud
...


6
...

A time clock registers the exact time an employee arrives on the job and the exact time the employee
departs
...


7
...
E
...
by internal auditors
...
Petty cash might be used, for
example, to pay for bus fares, taxi fares, tea and coffee for the office, and so on
...
A system is needed to keep
strict control over spending of petty cash, and to make sure that the amount of money held in petty cash is
always correct, and that no money is missing
...
The box, and the locked box is kept in an office safe or possibly in a locked drawer of the
office supervisor’s desk
...
All cash withdrawals from the bank to ‘top
up’ the petty cash must be recorded
...
The voucher must be properly authorised by a manager,
and should state the date of the expense
...

The person using the petty cash should obtain (if possible) a receipt for the item when it is purchased
...
If the unused cash is returned, the petty cash voucher should be amended to record the actual
amount of cash spent
...


Petty cash: imprest system
When petty cash is controlled by an imprest system, the amount of notes and coins in petty cash is ‘topped up’
from time to time, so that the total cash in petty cash is exactly equal to a specified limit
...
From time to time, the amount of cash held in petty cash
will be restored to $300, by making another cash withdrawal from the bank
...
The total of the vouchers for petty
cash expenses should equal the total amount of cash required to top up the petty cash to its limit
...
By checking the total of petty cash vouchers and
cash withdrawals from the bank, it should be possible to identify errors or fraud, where cash has been stolen or
is missing, or where petty cash vouchers appear to be incorrect or incomplete
...

The petty cash book will normally contain columns for analysing petty cash transactions into different types of
expense
...

EXAMPLE: PETTY CASH BOOK
A petty cash system is operated on the imprest system with a limit of $100
...
During March, payments out of petty cash totalled $64
...
At the end of March, the petty cash box is topped up to $100 by withdrawing $64 in cash from
the bank account
...

Accounting for petty cash in the main ledger
A petty cash account is an account in the main ledger
...

EXAMPLE: Using the example above record the accounting entries of the expenses in the main ledger and
record the reimbursement of the petty cash
...
For example it might be a business’s policy to withdraw $50 each Monday morning
in cash to deal with petty cash claims during the week
...
Alternatively if claims are very low then if $50 is added to petty
cash each Monday the amount of cash held will be accumulating
...
Petty cash is therefore topped up whenever it becomes necessary
...


Bank Reconciliation Statements





For purposes of safe keeping money is deposited at a bank
...
Every entity that entrusts its money to a bank is a creditor of the bank
...

Every business keeps a record of its transaction with the bank and the bank does the same for every
client
...
e
...
a cash receipt journal
...

The following will be reflected on the bank statement:
- The opening balance (beginning of the month)\
- Deposits credited during the month
- Cheques paid (debited) during the month
- Bank charges for the month
- Interest charged (debt) on overdraft or paid on a favourable (credit) bank balance
- Debit and stop orders for the month
- Dishonoured cheques for the month (cheques deposited, but not paid by the drawer’s bank
- Correction of errors made by the bank in the previous month

Example of a cashbook and bank statement

20XX
Dec 1 Bal b/f
20 S
...
Frank

20XX
Dec 1 Bal b/f
8 008910
21 Deposit

cash book before balance 31/12/20xx
$ 20XX
2 500
Dec 5
K
...
Francis
1 900
Bank statement
Withdrawal

Deposit

650
1 000

30

$
650
1 750

Balance
2 500
1 850
2 850

28 Deposit
29 008911
30 Bank Giro credit:G Jones
31 Bank charges

1 900
1 750
700
500

4750
3 000
3 700
3 200

*008910 and 008911 refer to the serial numbers on the cheques paid out
*with the above information it is possible to see that the two items not shown in the Company’s cash book:
- bank giro credit G Jones
$700
- bank charges
$500


G Jones had paid $700 but instead of sending a cheque he had paid the money direct into the
company’s bank account, using the bank services
...
The bank had charged the company $500 for keeping
the bank account and all the work connected with it
...

as we have identified the items missing from the cask book, we can now complete writing it up by entering the
two items we have identified:

20XX
Dec 1 Bal b/f
20 S
...
Frank
G
...


Where closing balances differ:
Although a cash book may be written up to date by a business, it obviously cannot alter the bank’s own records
...


20X2
Jan 1 Bal b/f
16 R Lomes
24 V Verity
31 J Soames
31 R Johnson
Bal b/d

Cash book before balance 31/12/20xx
$ 20X2
320
Jan 10 C Morgan
160
20 M McCarthy
140
28 Cheshire C rates
470
30 M Peck
90
31 Bal c/d
1 180
600

31

$
110
90
180
200
600
1 180

20XX
Jan 1 Bal b/f
12 10627
16 Deposit
23 10628
24 Deposit
28 Direct debit: Cheshire CC
31 Bank Giro credit: R Johnson

Bank statement
Withdrawal

Deposit

110
160
90
140
180
90

Balance
320
210
370
280
420
240
330

*identify which items are causing the two balances to differ even after the bank statement has been checked
against the cash book and the necessary additional entries have been made in the cash book
...
These are:
i
...
Peck on January 30
...
This is known as an
unpresented cheuque
...

Although a cheque for $470 was received from J Soames on 31 January and the business deposited it
with the bank on that date, the bank did not receive funds from Soames’ bank until February
...

-

The cash book balance on January 31 was $600, whereas the bank statement shows a balance of $330
...
e
...

It will either start with the bank statement balance or then reconcile it to the cash book balance, or it
will start with the cash book balance and then reconcile it to the bank statement balance
...
This will have to be
located and then corrected
...


-

It does not calculate what the bank account figure in the balance sheet should be because it starts with
the balance in the cash book after adjusting for items revealed in the bank statement
...
g
...
12
...

NB* in reconciling cash book and bank statement always start with the balance as per cash book
Other terms used in banking
1
...
e
...
you may ask your bank to pay $2million a month to a building society to repay a mortgage
...


Direct debits- these are payments which have to be made such as electricity bills, telephone bills, rates
and insurance premiums
...
This is particularly

33

useful if the amounts payable may vary from time to time, as it is the creditor who changes the
payments, not you
...

The cash book balance will be a credit:


An overdraft is often shown with the letters O/D following the amount



Alternatively, some banks use Dr or Cr after every balance entry to indicate whether the account is
overdrawn
...
i
...
negative number
...


Balance /overdraft per cash book
Normal Balance
Adjustments: unpresented cheques
bank lodgement not on bank statement
balance/overdraft per bank statement

Over drawn

plus
less
xxx

less
add
xxx

Adjusting entries in the case of an overdraft are the same as those you make when it is positive
...


stale cheques

2
...


variance in the amount in words and amount in figures

4
...


Alterations that are not counter signed for
...


If the owner of the account dies
...


From the following draw up a bank reconciliation statement from details as on 31 December 2006
$

34

Cash at bank as per bank column of the cash book
Unpresented cheques
Cheques received &paid into the bank but not yet entered on the bank statement
Credit transfers entered as banked on the bank statement but not entered in the cash book
Cash at hand as per bank statement

2
...
Write the cash book up to date
b
...

The person or business owing money to an enterprise which originates from a credit sale is known as a
trade debtor
...

The period is known as a credit term and is predetermined in accordance with the credit policy of the
enterprise making the sale
...
How debtors are encouraged to pay their accounts on time
2
...
Creation and adjustment of the provision for bad debts
Discount allowed
Discount is often offered to debtors in order to encourage a quick settlement of their debts within the stated
credit term
...


35

Example: A client purchased $550 worth of goods on credit on 1 March 2011
...
If the client pays before 31 March 2011 a discount of 2% will be
allowed
...

Interest charged
Many enterprises charge interest on the outstanding debt if an account is not paid within the credit term
...
g
...

If the client does not pay the account of $550 before 31 March 2011, but only pays it at the end of April
2011 he will be charged 18% per annum interest (for 1month) on $550
...

The interest increases the outstanding balance on the individual debtors account
...
Circumstances th
Dr
Cr
$
Cash

27 400

Surveying Supplies

19 300

Prepayments

35 000

Surveying Equipment

$

853 650

Accumulated depreciation – Surveying Equipment

354 600

Accounts payable

9 000

Long-term notes payable

120 000

Lisa Garza (capital)

346 800

Lisa Garza (withdrawals)

210 000

Surveying fees earned

584 000

Wages expense

168 200

56

Interest expense

7 200

Rent expense

54 000

Property taxes expense

24 700

Utilities expense

9 600

Repairs expense

5 350

1 414 400

a
...

c
...

e
...

g
...


1 414 400

Additional information:
Used supplies in 2009 $10 900
...

Insurance expense of $16 000 for the year of 2009
...

Earned but unpaid wages $2 100
...

Outstanding property taxes $6 200
...


Required:
1
...

2
...

3
...

4
...

Question Five
The following list of balance appeared in the books of Brotherhood, a sole proprietorship for
the year ended 31 December 2009
...
Estimated depreciation for the vehicle in 2009 was $9 100
...
Estimated depreciation for the equipment in 2009 was $1 950
...
On 31 December 2009, a stock count found the inventory to be $8 000
...
Prepare a trial balance as at 31 December 2009
...
Prepare an income statement for the year ended 31 December 2009
...
Prepare a statement of changes in owner’s equity for the year ended 31
December 2009
...
Prepare a balance sheet as at 31 December 2009
...
Capital: T
...
Stationary on hand at 28 February 2010 $ 150
...
A provision for bad debts at 5% on outstanding trade debtors balances must be
created
...
Rent income amounts to $1 500 per month and the rental has been charged for the full
financial year
...
Provide for depreciation on furniture and fittings at 5% per annum on cost price
...
Provide for interest still outstanding on mortgage bond
...
Land and buildings are not depreciated because they are classified as investment
properties
...
Prepare an income statement of Tafuma Fitz for the year ended 28 February 2010
...
Prepare a statement of changes in owner’s equity of Tafuma Fitz for the year ended
28 February 2010
...
Prepare a balance sheet of Tafuma Fitz as at 28 February 2010
...
The machine can be
used for a total of 20 000hours over an estimated life of 49 months
...
The financial year of
the business ends on 31 December each year
Title: Accounting principles
Description: basic principles of accounting