1 / 17

SIMPLIFYING ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS

SIMPLIFYING ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS. Two Rules for Debits and Credits: Outside Rule & AWE/LRC. M. Piczak November 2006. Debits and Credits. Novices to accounting find debits and credits confusing

arleen
Télécharger la présentation

SIMPLIFYING ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS

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. SIMPLIFYING ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS Two Rules for Debits and Credits: Outside Rule & AWE/LRC M. PiczakNovember 2006

  2. Debits and Credits • Novices to accounting find debits and credits confusing • Confusion is often overcome by memorizing the transactions and hoping new transactions are not thrown at them • One mistake will not permit a trial balance to balance • Banks do not help as they will credit your bank account with money put into your account, yet such ‘credits’ actually represent debits to your T account for tracking purposes

  3. SOLUTION • The Outside Rule* and here’s how: • Set up a large balance sheet with subaccounts shown in their respective positions • Increases to an account result in entries on the outer edge of a t account set up under Assets, Liabilities and Owner’s Equity • Decreases to an account result in entries on the inside of the Asset, Liability and Owner’s Equity accounts • Remember that there are two entries to each transaction with an increase in one having an attendant decrease in another *My thanks to colleague Reid MacWilliam for pointing out this simple rule that I wish I had learned when I was in School instead of memorizing entries…

  4. THE OUTSIDE RULE Assets Liabilities - + + - decreases increases increases decreases Cash A/R Equipment Loans Payable A/P Sal.Payable + - - + + - - + - + - + Expense Summary/ Expired Assets Expenses Owner’s Equity + - - + decreases increases Withdrawals Capital R/E Revenues - + - + - + + - Think of debit and credit entries as increases or decreases to T accounts arising out of day to day accounting transactions

  5. HANDLING THE EXPENSES - - + + Assets Liabilities Sales & revenues continue to be recorded using the Outside Rule - + Owner’s Equity Revenue Sale 1 Rent X Expenses are offsets to the full revenue claims held by owners Revenue 2 Adv. X. Sale 3 Utilities X. profit loss

  6. HANDLING THE EXPENSES - - + + Assets Liabilities Split the expenses out when entering transactions on the left side since these serve as offsets to revenues - + Owner’s Equity Rent X Revenue 2000 Sale 1 Sale 2 Separate T accounts permit the process of business analysis and control to proceed Adv. X. Sale 3 1100 profit loss Utilities X. 500

  7. 2 BIRDS WITH 1 STONE - - + + Assets Liabilities - + Owner’s Equity The income statement is nearly finished Rent X Revenue 2000 Sale 1 Sale 2 Adv. X. Sale 3 1100 profit loss Utilities X. 500

  8. THE NEXT STEP: CLOSING OUT T ACCOUNTS + - - + Assets Liabilities Loans Payable A/P Sal.Payable Cash A/R 500 500 200 500 300 700 300 300 200 200 500 100 100 900 400 700 1800 - + Owner’s Equity Rent Exp. Equipment Sales Capital 1700 300 2700 1000 300 1700 1000 2700 Adv. Exp. Cell Exp. 200 100 200 100

  9. STEP 3: THE TRIAL BALANCE • The purpose of the trial balance is to ensure that all debits = credits prior to preparing the final income statement and balance sheet • Involves transferring all T account closing balances to the trial balance • Arrange all accounts into debits (good things for the company) and credits (claims against the company by creditors/owners)

  10. DEBITS/RETIRED ASSETS CREDITS/CLAIMS Cash $1800 A/R 400 Equipment 1700 Sal. Payable $200 A/P 100 Loan Payable 500 Sales 1000 Expenses 600 O/E 2700 TOTAL $4500 = $4500 THE COMPLETED TRIAL BALANCE

  11. ABC Income Statement For the period ending Dec. 31, 20xx Sales $1000 Expenses Rent 300 Cell 100 Advertising 200 TOTAL X. $600 NET INCOME $400 THE INCOME STATEMENT Transfers to the O/E section of the balance sheet

  12. Balance Sheet ABC Company As at Dec. 31, 20xx ASSETSLIABILITIES CA CL Cash $1800 A/P $100 A/R 400 Sal Pay. 200 Loan Pay. 500 NCA NCL - none Equipment 1700 O/E Capital $2700 Net Income 400 TOTAL ASSETS TOTAL LIABS + O/E $3900 = $3900 THE BALANCE SHEET

  13. INCREASES TO ACCOUNTS • A customer cheque is deposited into the company’s bank account (asset, cash, increase; receivables, decrease) • Company owner puts more of their own money into the company to fund future expansion (owner’s equity, increase; cash increase) • Shipment of inventory is accepted and payment is to be made in 30 days (liabilities, accounts payable, increase; inventory increase)

  14. DECREASES TO ACCOUNTS • Company owner takes money out in form of dividend to pay themselves (owner’s equity, decrease; cash, decrease) • Employee payday (liabilities, employees payables decrease; cash decrease) • You sell an old piece of equipment for cash (assets, equipment, decrease; cash increase)

  15. IN SUMMARY • The procedure to be used is: • Set up your ‘large T Account’ • Double enter transactions using the Outside Rule • Remember how to handle expenses (they are retired assets and appear on the same side as assets) as a contra account against Revenues • Close out T accounts and transfer to Trial Balance • Balance Trial Balance • Prepare Income Statement first • Prepare Balance Sheet (balance)

  16. ONE FINAL RULE(courtesy Gord Bereza) • AWE: Assets, Withdrawals and Expenses increase on the left/debit side AWE + - • LRC: Liabilities, Revenues and Capital additions increase on the right/credit side LRC + -

  17. SIMPLIFYING ACCOUNTING TRANSACTIONS Two Rules for Debits and Credits: Outside Rule & AWE/LRC M. PiczakNovember 2006 The end

More Related