1 / 39

ACCT 2310 Accounting Principles I Chapter 2

ACCT 2310 Accounting Principles I Chapter 2. Dr. Robert R. Oliva Professor and Chairperson Department of Accounting University of Arkansas at Little Rock. Questions:. How do you find out the answer to the following questions?

Download Presentation

ACCT 2310 Accounting Principles I Chapter 2

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. ACCT 2310 Accounting Principles I Chapter 2 Dr. Robert R. Oliva Professor and Chairperson Department of Accounting University of Arkansas at Little Rock

  2. Questions: • How do you find out the answer to the following questions? • Does the business have enough cash to buy a $5000 piece of equipment? • Why was a $750 check written on March 28? • How much have you spent on salaries so far this month? • How much did you spend for an ad placed in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette during the first week in July?

  3. You need to have an appropriate accounting system in place • JOURNAL: Records daily transactions, describing date, amount, brief explanation. • Pages 62-64. • LEDGER: Keeps a running balance showing increases and decreases of each financial statement item in a separate record, e.g., • Balance sheet: Cash, accounts receivable, etc. • Income Statement: Revenues and expenses. • Pages 65-68

  4. Each business transaction must be recorded • Recording involves a 3-step approach: • Determine which “accounts” are affected. • As the Accounting Equation requires constant balancing, one “account” increases while other “account” decreases. • Double-entry accounting • Translate each increase and decrease into a debit or a credit transaction. • Initial recording done in a “Journal” • The book of original entry • Ledger: After all business transactions are recorded (journalized) then they are posted in the “Ledger”

  5. Flow of business transactions • Exhibit 2, page 56

  6. Will proper recording prevent fraud? • Bottom of page 54

  7. But before we can record in a journal or post to a ledger • We need to know what to call each business transaction • We need to separate business transactions into “Accounts”

  8. Account classification • Classification depends on the business transaction and the type of business. • Business transactions may be classified as affecting • Assets • Liabilities • Owners’ Equity • Revenues • Expenses

  9. Chapter 1: Lawn Mowing example • Many transactions were recorded in Owner’s Equity • Hard to separate and analyze • OK for a very small business. But in reality not very efficient. • More efficient approach: Separate “Owner’s Equity” into various accounts.

  10. Owner’s Equity is separated into four (4) separate “accounts”: • Capital • To record owner’s investments • Drawing • To record owner’s withdrawals • Revenue • To record revenues from customers • Expense • To record expenses incurred in business

  11. Examples of other “accounts”: • Cash • Supplies • Accounts Payable

  12. Accounts Organization Chart of Accounts • Accounts can be classified/organized into 5 major groups/categories: • Assets • Liabilities • Owner’s Equity • Revenues • Expenses • All business have these types, but names and/or numbers given to them will vary. • Unique: The Chart reflects the business transactions.

  13. In-class exercise: • Create a Chart of Accounts for Larry Sharp, M.D. • Consider Dr. Sharp’s practice and divide business transactions among the following • Assets • Liabilities • Owners’ Equity • Revenues • Expenses

  14. Larry Sharp, M.D. (a sole proprietorship) • Dr. Sharp’s practice has a bank account, supplies, and equipment. • He buys supplies on credit and pays in 30 days • His patients either pay same day or get bills • He rents the office and pays for utilities • He has malpractice insurance which he pays on on 1/1/xx • He has 2 employees and buys them flowers on their birthdays • He attends medical seminars to keep current in his practice.

  15. Larry Sharp, M.D. Chart of Accounts • Assets: # 1x • 10: Cash • 11: Accounts Receivable • 12:Supplies • 13: Prepaid Insurance • 14: Medical equipment • Liabilities: # 2x • 21: Accounts Payable • Owners’ Equity: # 3x • 31: Larry Sharp, Capital • 32: Larry Sharp, Drawing • Revenues: # 4x • 41: Fees earned • Expenses; # 5x • 51: Wage expenses • 52: Rent expenses • 53: Utilities expenses • 54: Medical Seminars expenses • 55: Supplies expenses • 56: Miscellaneous expenses • Later we will consider two other accounts: Insurance expense; Depreciation

  16. Recall: Why are we classifying the accounts? • To record the business transactions into a journal • Each business transaction requires at least 2 entries to keep the Accounting Equation on balance.

  17. What account increases and what account decreases?

  18. The hijacking receivable • Page 53

  19. Account Characteristics: pp. 49-50 • Form: The “T’ account • Two sides of the “T” • Left side: The debit side • Right side: The credit side • Some accounts increase by “debit” entries • Some account increase by “credit” entries

  20. The top of the “T” Describes type of account • Based on the Accounting Equation: Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity • The Accounting Equation determines the recording of an account’s increases and decreases, e.g., Debits and Credits • Page 52

  21. Assets’ Accounts: • Assets increase with “debits”, e.g., increases recorded on the left side of the “T”. • AID • Assets decrease with “credits”, e.g., decreases recorded on the left side of the “T” • ADC

  22. Liabilities’ Accounts • Liabilities and Owner’s Equity increase with “credits”, e.g., increases recorded on the left side of the “T”. • LIC • Liabilities and Owners’ Equity decrease with “debits”, e.g., decreases recorded on the left side of the “T” • LDD • Note: Rules mirror each other • Memorize only one

  23. A different approach • After eating dinner, let’s read the comics • Using the “T”: • Left: After Eating Dinner: Accounts increasing with debits: • Assets • Expenses • Drawings • Right: Let’s Read the Comics: Accounts increasing with credits: • Liabilities • Revenues • Capital

  24. In-class Exercise: Posting entries into “T” accounts • (a) Dr. Sharp deposits $7000 cash in business account • (b) Buys $5700 in medical equipment on account. • (c) Pays $500 cash for ad in newspaper • (d) Pays $75 for supplies. • (e) Receives $1000 from patients • (f) Pays for the $5700 in equipment. • (g) Patients are billed $300 • (h) Paid employee $150 • (i) Patients in (g) send $300 check in payment. • (j) Dr. Sharp withdraws $575 for personal use

  25. Solution • Left: After Eating Dinner: Accounts increasing with debits: • Assets • Expenses • Drawings • Right: Let’s Read the Comics: Accounts increasing with credits: • Liabilities • Revenues • Capital

  26. Solution: Assets: • Cash account • Debit: (a), (e); and (i) • Credit: (c); (d); (f); (h); (j) • Account receivable • Debit: (g) • Credit: (i) • Supplies: • Debit: (d) • Equipment: • Debit: (b)

  27. Solution: Liabilities • Accounts Payable • Credit: (b) • Debit: (f)

  28. Solution: Capital, Revenues, Expenses • Capital Account • M. Gordon, Capital: • Credit: (a) • M. Gordon, Drawing: • Debit: (j) • Revenues • Fees earned: • Credit: (e); (g) • Expenses: • Wages • Debit: (h) • Advertising • Debit; (c)

  29. But many times proper recoding requires through analysis • Payments in advance

  30. Pre-payments paid • Difference between paying for 2-year in advance v. 1-month in advance: • Page 56: Pre-payment of a 2-year policy on December 1st. • Credit cash • Debit an asset • Page 58: Pre-payment of 1-month rent on December 1st. • Credit cash • Debit an expense

  31. Pre-payments received • Receiving $360 for prepaid rent 3-months in advance • Page 58 • Debit receipt of $360 cash • Credit a liability: Unearned Revenue • Each month • Debit the liability • Credit revenues

  32. Answers to Earlier Questions: • How do you know whether the business has enough cash to buy the equipment? • Ledger: Current balance in the CASH ACCOUNT. • Why was a $750 check written on March 28? • Journal: The journal will show a brief description as to why the check was written. • How much have you spent on salaries so far this month? • Ledger: WAGE EXPENSE ACCOUNT shows balance to date. • How much did you spend for an ad placed in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette during the first week in July? • Journal: Look for entries during the first week in July and look for description indicating the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.

  33. TRIAL BALANCE • Reports the balance of each ledger account • Aim: TO show that Debits = Credits

  34. In-Class Exercise • Trial balance for Dr. Sharp

  35. Dr. Larry Sharp, M.D. Trail Balance May 31, 20xx • Cash………… 1300 • Supplies…….. 75 • Equipment…. 5700 • Dr. L Sharp, Capital 7000 • Dr. L. Sharp, Drawing 575 • Fees earned 1300 • Wages Expense 150 • Advertising Expense 500 • _______ ______ • 8300 8300

  36. Possible errors Exhibit 6 • Transposition • Slide

  37. Error Correction • Exhibit 7

  38. Errors undetected by a Trial Balance • Failing to record or post a transaction • Recording the same erroneous amounts as debits and credits • Recording the same transaction more than once • Correct debit accompanied by crediting wrong account • Would the trial balance be off if you record a $500 sale on account as follows? • Debited Cash for $500 • Credited Fees earned for $500 • Answer: No!

  39. FINANCIAL ANALYSIS • Horizontal analysis • Comparing time periods • Exhibit 8

More Related