1 / 12

Revenue and Expense Recognition

Revenue and Expense Recognition. Chapter 7. Issue: Revenue & Expense Recognition. Accrual vs. Cash. Accrual vs. Cash. What ’ s Revenue & Expenses?. Accrual vs. Cash. Accrual Basis: Revenue & Expenses. ‘98 FYE. ‘00 FYE. July 1/98. June 30/99. Fiscal Period. Cash Basis.

tarshad
Télécharger la présentation

Revenue and Expense Recognition

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. Revenue and Expense Recognition Chapter 7

  2. Issue: Revenue & Expense Recognition Accrual vs. Cash

  3. Accrual vs. Cash What’s Revenue & Expenses?

  4. Accrual vs. Cash Accrual Basis: Revenue & Expenses ‘98 FYE ‘00 FYE July 1/98 June 30/99 Fiscal Period Cash Basis Cash Receipts Revenue Expenses Cash Disbursements

  5. Accrual vs. Cash Accrual recognizes resource flows prior to cash flows

  6. Accrual vs. Cash: Example A) Insurance premium paid in ‘99 Dejevu Ltd comparative B/S for ‘98 & ‘99 reported the following selected amounts Prepaid Ins Ins Exp 1400 1500 1500 X ‘99 ‘98 1000 1400 + X- 1500 = 1000 Prepaid Insurance $1000 $1400 X = 1100 B) Rent rev collected in cash in ‘99 $1800 $1000 Unearned Rent Rev Unearned Rent Rent Rev Dejevu’s ‘99 I/S reported the following: 14400 14400 1000 X 1000 + X - 1800 = 14400 Rent Rev $14,400 1800 X = 15,200 Insurance Expense $1,500

  7. Revenue Recognition Issue: When? Matching expenses

  8. Revenue Recognition: Criteria • All or substantially all of goods or services have been provided • Most costs incurred or can accurately measured • Revenue is measurable in $ • Asset received can be measured

  9. Revenue Recognition 4 Common Methods Point of Sale Goods or services delivered & legal title has passed between vendor & purchaser.

  10. Revenue Recognition 4 Common Methods % of completion Estimate % of project completed during period and recognize proportion of total expected revenue and costs

  11. Revenue Recognition 4 Common Methods Completion of Production No customer but project is now complete - is this a reasonable means to recognize revenue? Only when guaranteed market, stable prices, minimal marketing costs.

  12. Revenue Recognition 4 Common Methods Cash received! Appropriate when serious doubt about the collectibility of cash.

More Related