1 / 52

Chapter 3 The Adjusting Process

Chapter 3 The Adjusting Process. Accrual Accounting Versus Cash-Basis Accounting. Accrual Basis Revenues recognized when earned Expenses recognized when incurred. Cash Basis Revenues recognized when cash received Expenses recorded when cash paid. Not GAAP.

debie
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3 The Adjusting Process

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3 The Adjusting Process

  2. Accrual Accounting Versus Cash-Basis Accounting • Accrual Basis • Revenues recognized when earned • Expenses recognized when incurred • Cash Basis • Revenues recognized when cash received • Expensesrecorded when cash paid Not GAAP

  3. Accrual vs. Cash-Basis: Revenue

  4. Accrual vs. Cash-Basis: Revenue Accrual basis revenue transactions Cash-basis revenue transactions

  5. Accrual vs. Cash-Basis: Expenses

  6. Accrual vs. Cash-Basis Accounting Accrual basis Cash-basis

  7. S3-2: COMPARING ACCRUAL AND CASH-BASIS ACCOUNTING The Johnny Flowers Law Firm uses a client database. Suppose Johnny Flowers paid $2,900 for a computer. Requirements: 1. Describe how the business should account for the $2,900 expenditure under • the cash basis. b. the accrual basis.

  8. S3-2: COMPARING ACCRUAL AND CASH-BASIS ACCOUNTING 2. State why the accrual basis is more realistic for this situation.

  9. Accounting Period Concept • Businesses prepare financial statements for specific periods to evaluate performance • Basic accounting period = one year • Interim periods

  10. Revenue Recognition Principle • When to record revenue? • When it is earned • The amount of revenue to recorded? • Value of item or service transferred to customer

  11. Recording Revenue: The Revenue Recognition Principle

  12. The Matching Principle • Measure all expenses incurred during the period • Match the expenses against the revenues earned during the same period

  13. The Time-Period Concept • Requires that accounting information be reported at regular intervals • Accounts are updated at the end of each accounting period

  14. Time-Period Concept On May 31, Smart Touch recorded salary expense of $900 that is owed to an employee at the end of the month.

  15. Adjusting Entries

  16. Adjusting Entries • Prepared at end of an accounting period • Assigns: • Revenues to the period when earned • Expenses to the period when incurred • Update asset and liability accounts • Need to properly match revenues and expenses to measure: • Net Income • Assets and Liabilities

  17. Adjusting Entry Rules

  18. Types of Adjusting Entries

  19. Prepaid Expenses • Advance payments of expenses • Recorded as an asset • Adjusting entry records amount used as an expense

  20. Prepaid Expense: Rent

  21. Depreciation • Plant assets • Long-lived tangible assets used in business operations • Depreciation • Allocation of a plant asset’s cost to expense over its useful life

  22. Depreciation Entry

  23. Accumulated Depreciation • Contra asset • Holds sum of all depreciation recorded on a plant asset • Book value

  24. Depreciation Posting

  25. Accrued Expenses • Expenses incurred before payment is made • Opposite of a prepaid expense

  26. Accrued Expense Entries

  27. Accrued Revenues • Revenue earned before cash is received • Results in a receivable

  28. Unearned Revenue • Cash is collected before revenue is earned • Also called deferred revenue BEFORE

  29. Unearned Revenue Entries

  30. Summary of Adjusting Entries • To properly measure net income for the period • To update the balance sheet

  31. Summary of Adjusting Entries

  32. S3-5: IDENTIFYING TYPES OF ADJUSTING ENTRIES • A select list of transactions for Anuradha’s Goals follows: Apr 1 Paid six months of rent, $4,800. 10 Received $1,200 from customer for six-month service contract that began April 1. 15 Purchased computer for $1,000. Requirement: 1. For each transaction, identify what type of adjusting entry would be needed.

  33. S3-5: IDENTIFYING TYPES OF ADJUSTING ENTRIES • A select list of transactions for Anuradha’s Goals follows: Apr 18 Purchased $300 of office supplies on account. 30 Work performed but not yet billed to customer, $500. 30 Employees earned $600 in salary that will be paid May 2.

  34. E3-22: JOURNALIZING ADJUSTING ENTRIES AND ANALYZING THEIR EFFECT ON THE INCOME STATEMENT • The following data at January 31, 2012 is given for EBM, Inc. • a. Depreciation, $500 • b. Prepaid rent expired, $600 • c. Interest expense accrued, $300 • d. Employee salaries owed for Monday through Thursday of a five-day workweek; weekly payroll, $13,000 • e. Unearned service revenue earned, $1,300 • Requirement: • 1. Journalize the adjusting entries needed on January 31, 2012.

  35. E3-22: JOURNALIZING ADJUSTING ENTRIES AND ANALYZING THEIR EFFECT ON THE INCOME STATEMENT

  36. E3-22: JOURNALIZING ADJUSTING ENTRIES AND ANALYZING THEIR EFFECT ON THE INCOME STATEMENT 2. Suppose the adjustments made in Requirement 1 were not made. Compute the overall overstatement or understatement of net income as a result of the omission of these adjustments.

  37. Adjusted Trial Balance • Prepared after adjusting entries are posted • Useful step in preparing financial statements • Often appears on a work sheet

  38. S3-10: PREPARING AN ADJUSTED TRIAL BALANCE

  39. Income Statement

  40. Statement of Retained Earnings

  41. Balance Sheet

  42. E3-25: PREPARING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Refer to the adjusted trial balance in Exercise 3-21 for the month ended April 30, 2012. Requirements: • Prepare the income statement. 2. Prepare the statement of retained earnings. 3. Prepare the balance sheet.

  43. E3-21:ADJUSTED TRIAL BALANCE

  44. E3-25: PREPARING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

  45. E3-25: PREPARING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

  46. E3-25: PREPARING THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

  47. Alternative Treatment of PrepaidExpenses • Prepaid Expenses (normally) • Advance payments of expenses • Debit an asset account • Adjust at end of period • Alternative • Debit an expenseaccount • Adjust at end of period

  48. Prepaid Expense Initially debit and expense account Adjust at end of period for unused amount

More Related