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More free books @ www.BingEbook.com 42 Part I: Business Accounting Basics Answers to Problems on Financial Effects of Transactions The following are the answers to the practice questions presented earlier in this chapter. a Financing activity. To start a business, its owners invest an initial amount of capital (usually money) and from time to time after start-up, they may invest more capital in the business. b Profit-making activity. Wages and salaries is a basic type of expense of all businesses. c Profit-making activity. The cost of utilities is a basic expense of all businesses. d Set-up and follow-up transactions for sales and expenses. This payment is the follow-up transaction that completes the previous purchase on credit. e Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings +$950,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$950,000 +$950,000 = Condensed Balance Sheet Cash g Operating liabilities Receivables Assets f +$950,000 +$100,000 Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net +$750,000 Assets +$850,000 Owners’ retained earnings = Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$850,000 Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory –$175,000 Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Assets h +$850,000 –$175,000 = Owners’ retained earnings –$175,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity –$175,000 Condensed Balance Sheet Cash –$500,000 Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings Assets –$500,000 = Liabilities and Owners’ Equity –$500,000 –$500,000 More free books @ www.BingEbook.com Chapter 2: Financial Effects of Transactions i Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Receivables +$34,750,000 Operating liabilities +$250,000 Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings +$35,000,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$35,000,000 Assets +$35,000,000 = The business added $35,000,000 to receivables from its credit sales during the year. It collected $34,750,000 on receivables during the year ($31,500,000 + $3,250,000). Therefore, receivables increased $250,000, as you see in the balance sheet above. j Condensed Balance Sheet Cash +$12,500,000 Operating liabilities +$375,000 Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings +$12,125,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$12,500,000 Assets +$12,500,000 = The business fulfilled 85 percent of its advanced payment for sales during the year, which means it recorded $10,625,000 sales revenue. Also, the company earned $1,500,000 by delivering products to “pay off” the balance in the liability account for advance payments at the start of the year. Sales revenue is the sum of the two, or $12,125,000. The business has not delivered on 15 percent of its $12,500,000 advance payment sales during the year, which gives a $1,875,000 year-end balance in this liability. The year-end balance is $375,000 higher than the beginning balance in this liability. By the way, if you got this answer right the first time around, congratulations! This is a tough problem. k Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings +$3,200,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$3,200,000 Assets l +$3,200,000 +$3,200,000 = Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Receivables +$5,600,000 Operating liabilities +$500,000 Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings +$6,100,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$6,100,000 Assets +$6,100,000 = In its income statement for the year, the business reports $6,250,000 sales revenue and $150,000 bad debts expense for the receivables written-off during the year. So, the net effect on owners’ retained earnings is an increase of $6,100,000. 43 More free books @ www.BingEbook.com 44 Part I: Business Accounting Basics m Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Assets n –$4,200,000 –$200,000 –$4,400,000 = Owners’ retained earnings –$4,500,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity –$4,400,000 Condensed Balance Sheet Cash –$2,420,000 Operating liabilities Receivables Inventory Assets +$75,000 Interest-bearing liabilities +$45,000 Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net o +$100,000 –$2,375,000 = Owners’ retained earnings –$2,450,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity –$2,375,000 Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings Assets = +$38,000 –$38,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity The income tax effect of recording the additional $38,000 expenses is not reflected in this answer. The additional $38,000 is deductible to figure taxable income, so the income tax expense for the year would decrease. p Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Operating liabilities Receivables Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net Owners’ retained earnings Assets = –$125,000 +$125,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity Thinking like a crook, I probably would manipulate liabilities for unpaid expenses; I would deliberately not record $125,000 of these liabilities. The effects of this manipulation are shown in the condensed balance sheet above. As you see, operating liabilities are understated $125,000. Therefore, total expenses for the year are $125,000 lower, and net income is $125,000 higher (before income tax is taken into account). Doing accounting fraud this way may deceive auditors because there’s no record of these unrecorded liabilities in the accounts. However, a sharp auditor may notice something missing if he or she looks carefully for unrecorded liabilities. q Condensed Balance Sheet Cash +$295,000 Operating liabilities +$200,000 Receivables +$75,000 Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory +$25,000 Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net -$95,000 Owners’ retained earnings +$100,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$300,000 Assets +$300,000 = More free books @ www.BingEbook.com Chapter 2: Financial Effects of Transactions r Condensed Balance Sheet Cash Receivables –$5,000 Interest-bearing liabilities Inventory +$50,000 Owners’ invested capital PP&E, net –$75,000 Owners’ retained earnings +$300,000 Liabilities and Owners’ Equity +$295,000 +$295,000 = Condensed Balance Sheet Cash $495,000 Operating liabilities $445,000 Receivables $375,000 Interest-bearing liabilities $500,000 Inventory $450,000 Owners’ invested capital $250,000 PP&E, net $475,000 Owners’ retained earnings $600,000 Assets t Operating liabilities +$250,000 Assets s +$70,000 $1,795,000 = Liabilities and Owners’ Equity $1,795,000 Condensed Balance Sheet Cash $515,000 Operating liabilities $445,000 Receivables $375,000 Interest-bearing liabilities $600,000 Inventory $450,000 Owners’ invested capital $250,000 PP&E, net $475,000 Owners’ retained earnings $520,000 Assets $1,815,000 = Liabilities and Owners’ Equity $1,815,000 45 More free books @ www.BingEbook.com 46 Part I: Business Accounting Basics More free books @ www.BingEbook.com Chapter 3 Getting Started in the Bookkeeping Cycle In This Chapter 䊳 Establishing a chart of accounts 䊳 Recognizing the difference between real and nominal accounts 䊳 Appreciating the centuries-old debits and credits method 䊳 Making journal entries for business transactions T he bookkeeping and recordkeeping system of a business requires an accountant to do the following: ⻬ Establish the chart of accounts in which the transactions of the business are recorded ⻬ Record original entries for transactions of the business as they occur day by day ⻬ Use the debits and credits system for recording transactions in order to keep the books (accounts) of the business in balance ⻬ Record additional adjusting entries at the end of the period to adjust revenue and expense accounts in order to make profit correct ⻬ Record certain “housekeeping” entries, called closing entries, to bring the profit accounting process for the year to a close This chapter explains the first three elements: the chart of accounts, original entries, and debits and credits. Chapter 4 completes the recordkeeping cycle by explaining the last two elements: adjusting entries and closing entries. It makes no difference whether the bookkeeping process is handled by a person recording entries by hand (popularly envisioned wearing a green eyeshade and arm garters and making entries with a quill pen) or a 21st-century bookkeeper working at a computer keyboard. The recordkeeping process is fundamentally the same: Adopt a chart of accounts, make original entries using debits and credits to keep the books in balance, make adjusting entries to get profit for the period right, and close the books at the end of the year. IBM does it this way, and so does you local convenience store. The process reminds me of the saying: “The more things change, the more things stay the same.” More free books @ www.BingEbook.com 48 Part I: Business Accounting Basics Constructing the Chart of Accounts Accounts are the basic building blocks of an accounting system. An account is a category of information, like a file in which a certain type of information is stored. The reason for establishing an account is that the business needs specific information pulled together in order to prepare a financial statement or some other accounting report. The first step in setting up an accounting system is to identify the particular accounts that are needed. The financial effects of transactions are recorded as increases or decreases in accounts, and you can’t make an accounting entry for a transaction without having accounts to increase or decrease. In short, no accounts mean no accounting! Suppose you’re the chief accountant of a brand new business. It’s your very first day on the job. Where do you start (after finding the restroom)? Your first order of business is to establish the chart of accounts that will be used to record the transactions of the business. The chart of accounts becomes the official set of accounts that you use to record the effects of transactions. Unless you authorize the creation of a new account, the accounts in the chart are the only ones you use. The need for one account in the chart of accounts, the cash account, is pretty obvious. A business needs to know how much money it has in its checking account with its bank, so it must establish a cash account and record cash receipts and disbursements in the account. Which other accounts are needed? This is the $64,000 question. To answer this question, the chief accountant looks to the information the business needs to report in its financial statements and income tax returns (the two major information demands on the accounting system of a business). Business corporations file Form 1120, U.S. Corporation Income Tax Return, with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The first page of this income tax return requires the following revenue and income information: ⻬ Line 1, Gross receipts or sales ⻬ Line 1b, Less sales returns and allowances ⻬ Line 1c, (Line 1 minus Line 1b) ⻬ Line 2, Cost of goods sold ⻬ Line 3, Gross profit (Line 1c minus Line 2) ⻬ Line 4, Dividends ⻬ Line 5, Interest ⻬ Line 6, Gross rents ⻬ Line 7, Gross royalties More free books @ www.BingEbook.com Chapter 3: Getting Started in the Bookkeeping Cycle Q. A. Which accounts should the business establish to provide the information required in the first part of its annual income tax return? • Cost of goods sold expense for the cost of products sold to customers The business should establish the following accounts: • Interest income for interest earned on investments and loans • Sales revenue for gross revenue from sales to customers • Rental income for income from property being leased to others • Sales returns and allowances for returns of products and price reductions after making sales • Royalty income for income from mineral rights, copyrights, and so on owned by the business • Dividend income for income from investments in stocks of other companies The exact titles of these accounts vary from business to business. However, the account titles listed here are fairly typical. The sales returns and allowance account is a contra account to the sales revenue account, which means that it offsets the sales revenue account. The balance in this account is deducted from sales revenue to determine net sales revenue, which is reported on Line 1c in Form 1120. If a business knows that it won’t have any income from dividends, interest, rents, and royalties, then it shouldn’t bother to establish accounts for these sources of income. No account is needed for Line 1c or Line 3 because they’re calculated amounts, not balances of accounts. 1. A business rents the building that houses its retail store, its warehouse, and its administrative offices. It pays rent in cash, so obviously the business needs a cash account. Should the business include an expense account for rent in its chart of accounts? Solve It 2. A business borrows money from its bank. Identify the liability account and the expense account that it should include in its chart of accounts for the borrowing of money. Solve It 49 More free books @ www.BingEbook.com 50 Part I: Business Accounting Basics 3. A business employs a typical range of employees — janitors, salespeople, bookkeepers, truck drivers, managers, and so on. It provides a basic retirement plan and pays the premiums for employees’ medical and hospital insurance. The annual income tax return filed with the IRS requires the following information: compensation of officers; salaries and wages; employee benefit program; and pension and profitsharing plans. Should the business include a separate expense account for each of these compensation elements in its chart of accounts? 4. The income tax Form 1120 for business corporations requires the reporting of the following assets: trade notes and accounts receivables; buildings and other depreciable assets; and loans to shareholders. Should the business include separate accounts for each of these assets in its chart of accounts? (These are only three of many items of information that the IRS requires to be reported in the balance sheet that must be included in a business’s annual income tax returns.) Solve It Solve It Distinguishing Real and Nominal Accounts Businesses keep two types of accounts: ⻬ Real accounts are those reported in the balance sheet, which is the summary of the assets, liabilities, and owners’ equities of a business. The label real refers to the continuous, permanent nature of this type of account. Real accounts are active from the first day of business to the last day. (A real account could have a temporary zero balance, in which case it’s not reported in the balance sheet.) Real accounts contain the balances of assets, liabilities, and owners’ equities at a specific point in time, such as at the close of business on the last day of the year. A real account is a record of the amount of asset, liability, or owners’ equity at a precise moment in time. The balance in a real account is the net amount after subtracting decreases from increases in the account. ⻬ Nominal accounts are those reported in the income statement, which is the summary of the revenue and expenses of a business for a period of time. Balances in nominal accounts are cumulative over a period of time. Take the balance in the sales revenue account at the end of the year, for example. This balance is the total amount of sales over the entire year. Likewise, the balance in advertising expense is the total amount of the expense over the entire year. At the end of the period, the accountant uses the balances in the nominal accounts of a business to determine its net profit or loss for the period — this is the main reason for keeping the nominal accounts. More free books @ www.BingEbook.com Chapter 3: Getting Started in the Bookkeeping Cycle Here’s a rough analogy to help you understand the difference between real and nominal accounts: Consider the water held behind a dam at a particular point in time. The water is real because you can dip your toe in it. Compare this body of water with the total amount of water that flowed through the dam over the last year. This water isn’t there because it has already gone downriver. This amount is the measure of total flow for a period of time. Assets are like the water behind the dam, and sales revenue is like the flow of water over the year. Nominal (revenue and expense) accounts are closed at the end of the year. After these accounts have done their jobs accumulating amounts of sales and expenses for the year 2006, for example, their balances are closed. Their balances are reset to zero to start the year 2007. Nominal accounts are emptied out to make way for accumulating sales revenue and expenses during the following year. I cover closing entries in Chapter 4. Q. A business has just released its financial report for the year just ended, which includes its balance sheet at year-end and its income statement for the year. You take the time to count the number of accounts in each statement and find 20 accounts in the balance sheet and 6 accounts in the income statement. These counts do not include calculated amounts, such as the total of assets in the balance sheet and gross profit in the income statement. How many accounts does the business need? A. The absolute minimum number of accounts that business needs is 20 balance sheet (real) accounts and 6 income statement (nominal) accounts. Otherwise, it doesn’t have enough separation of information to prepare its two financial statements. In actual practice, businesses keep many more accounts than they report in their balance sheets and income statements. If you were to look at the chart of accounts maintained by even a relatively small business, you’d find hundreds of accounts (maybe more). For example, a business may keep a separate account for each checking account it uses but, in its balance sheet, report only one cash account, which is the combined total of all its separate cash accounts. Similarly, the business may keep different notes payable accounts, one for each note payable obligation, but combine all notes into one total liability amount in its balance sheet. Another example is a business that keeps different sales revenue accounts, broken down by product lines, sales territories, and so on. It reports only one total sales revenue account in its income statement. (Public businesses are subject to disclosure rules regarding segment reporting of sales, which is too technical to go into here.) 51
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