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Revenue Accounting: Governmental Funds

This chapter explores the recognition, classification, and reporting of revenues in governmental funds, including nonexchange revenues, levy collection and enforcement of property taxes, investment income, intergovernmental revenues, and other types of revenues. It also covers revenue budget revisions, changes in principles, and revenue-related error corrections and restatements.

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Revenue Accounting: Governmental Funds

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  1. Revenue Accounting:Governmental Funds Chapter 5

  2. Learning Objectives • Determine when to recognize and report various revenues • Identify categories of nonexchange revenues and when to recognize assets and revenues • Understand accounting for levy, collection, and enforcement of property taxes and other tax revenues • Account for investment income • Distinguish and account for intergovernmental revenues • Understand classification and accounting for other types of revenues • Account for and report revenue budget revisions, changes in principles, and revenue-related error corrections & restatements

  3. Revenues in governmental funds • Result in a corresponding increase in net assets of governmental entity as a whole • Result from exchange-like interfund services provided

  4. Nonexchange Transactions • Governed by GASBS #33 • 4 classifications of transactions • May have significant deferred revenues due to timing of recognizing asset and revenue from transaction • Revenues recognition requires entity to meet both • Asset recognition criteria or received cash • Revenue recognition criteria x

  5. Modified Accrual Revenue Recognition • Recognize only revenues susceptible to accrual – others on a cash basis • Requirements for susceptible to accrual • Objectively measurable • Legally available (usable) to finance current period expenditures Comparison of accrual and modified accrual x

  6. Establishing legal claim to revenues • Taxes – levy establishes claims to resources • Charges for services – performing the service • Sales taxes – business making a taxable sale • Income taxes – taxpayer earning taxable wages

  7. Recommended Classes of Revenues • Taxes • Licenses & permits • Intergovernmental revenues • Charges for services • Fines and forfeits • Miscellaneous

  8. Types of Tax Revenues • Taxpayer assessed • Income taxes • Sales taxes • Levied – property taxes

  9. Taxpayer assessed taxes • Must assure that tax base has been accurately reported by taxpayer – may be very difficult to do • Should be recognized when susceptible to accrual • When underlying transaction takes place • In practice, usually recognized when collected • Revenue from tax stamps usually recognized when stamps are sold

  10. Administering property taxes • Tax assessor determines assessed value of property • Local assessment review board hears complaints about assessments • Boards of equalization assign values to taxing districts • Legislative body levies amount of tax needed to cover expenditures • Tax levy distributed among taxpayers based on assessed value • Taxpayers are billed • Tax collections are credited to taxpayers’ accounts • Collects enforced by penalties, interest, & sale of property for taxes

  11. 1. Assessment of Property • Valuing property for tax purposes • Properties of other governments & religious organizations exempt from tax • Several governments may tax same property – overlapping jurisdictions

  12. 2. Review of Assessment • Performed by local board • May adjust individual assessments • Taxpayers can still appeal in courts

  13. 3. Equalization of Assessments • Assessments made by a number of different assessors • Equalization board attempts to make sure multiple properties are taxed at the same percentage of fair value

  14. 4. Levying the Tax • Levy made through ordinance • Levies may vary in level of restrictions as to use or purpose of tax • Determining tax rate – divide levy by total assessed valuation – resulting percentage is rate or mills per dollar

  15. 5. Distribution of Levy to Taxpayers Amount due from each taxpayer is determined by multiplying rate times assessed value of property

  16. 6. Taxpayers are billed • Amount owed by each taxpayer entered into Tax Roll • Taxes recorded in the accounts • Receivable is for gross levy • Adjustments made for • Allowance for uncollectible accounts • Discounts on taxes

  17. 7. Recording Tax Collections • Must keep track of which year’s taxes were collected – current and delinquent • Taxes may be levied but not available • Levied for next year’s operations • Will not be collected in time to be available • Taxes collected in advance – reported as deferred revenue at time of collection

  18. 8. Enforcing Tax Collections • Interest and penalties – assessed for late payment of taxes – subject to availability requirement • Tax sales • Lien receivable created from taxes receivable, interest and penalties, & court costs • Allowances also converted • Sale price > than receivable – difference goes to taxpayer • Sale price < than receivable – charge allowance account

  19. Licenses and Permits • Categories • Business – alcoholic beverages, health, corporations, utilities, professional, occupational, and amusements • Nonbusiness – building, vehicles, driver licenses, hunting & fishing, marriage, burial, & animal • Rates established by ordinance and adjusted periodically

  20. Intergovernmental Revenues • Government-mandated nonexchange transactions • Voluntary nonexchange transactions

  21. Government-mandated Nonexchange Transactions • Government at one level • Provides resources to government at another level, and • Requires recipient to use them for a specific purpose • Provider government establishes purpose restrictions and may set time requirements and other eligibility requirements

  22. Voluntary Nonexchange Transactions • Legislative or contractual agreements between two or more willing parties • Examples: grants, certain entitlements, and donations • Parties not limited to governments but includes individuals • Provider may establish purpose restrictions and eligibility requirements and may require return of resources if requirements not met

  23. Capital Grants Solely for capital purposes Examples Airport improvements Buses Subway systems Wastewater treatment plants Operating Grants All other grants Example – operation of social welfare programs Types of Grants

  24. Entitlements – portions of appropriations allocated among governments based on relative populations (or some other measure) Shared revenues – varies in amount in each period (depending on collections) and allocated based on some formula or underlying transaction Entitlements & Shared Revenues

  25. Intergovernmental Revenue Accounting (IGR) Issues • Fund Identification • Pass-Through Grants • Revenue Recognition

  26. Fund Identification • Not always necessary to establish a separate fund for grants • Use GF whenever possible • Use SRF only if legally mandated • Resources for debt principal/interest payment should be in DSF • Use CPF for grants restricted for capital acquisition/construction • Grants for EFs or ISFs should be accounted for in those funds

  27. Pass-Through Grants • Primary recipient (entity that first receives the money) uses grant to support some other program • Primary recipient must pass grant along to intended user (subrecipient) – cannot use for own purposes • Subrecipient uses grant for intended purpose – or passes along to sub-subrecipient

  28. Pass-Through Grants • Primary recipient generally accounts for grant as revenue and expenditure • Primary recipient may use Agency Fund only if it acts as cash conduit – no administrative or financial involvement with grant

  29. Revenue Recognition • Unrestricted IGR recognized as revenues immediately, if available • Restricted IGR not recognized until all eligibility requirements are met: generally must be expended for allowable costs to meet requirements – known as “expenditure-driven” grant

  30. IGR recognition • If grant received before earned, recognize asset (Cash), but defer revenue until earned • If grant earned before received, recognize asset (receivable) and revenue, if considered available

  31. Charges for Services • Result from goods and services provided to public, other departments or other governments • When dealing with other departments, must distinguish between reimbursements and interfund service transactions • Recognize revenue when service is provided (earned), if available

  32. Special Assessments • Service provided in one year, collection made in subsequent years • Expenditures recognized for service • Revenue deferred until collection

  33. Special Assessments

  34. Special Assessments

  35. Fines & Forfeits • Usually not that big of a source of revenue • Revenue usually recognized on a cash basis • Large fines might be accrued

  36. Miscellaneous Revenues • Investment earnings • Capital assets sales / losses • PILOTs • Escheats • Private contributions

  37. Investment Earnings • Most complicated issue in this section • Rules changed dramatically with GASBS #31 – some things actually made easier • GASBS #31 did for investments what FASBS #115 did in the private sector – only the GASB rules are much easier • GASBS #31 identified types of investments to adjust to fair value x

  38. Essential Elements of Fair Value Accounting for Investments • Investments are carried at fair value • Premiums & discounts on investments need not be amortized, unless using amortized cost • Fair value accounting not used for investments accounted for using equity method

  39. Reporting Interest Income and Changes in Fair Value • Investment income = cash interest and dividends received or accrued ± realized gains (losses) ± changes in fair value of investments • Investment income may be reported on single line or broken into components: • Interest and dividends • Net increase (decrease) in fair value of investments [wording required by GASB] • Realized & unrealized gains & losses should not be reported separately in statements but may be disclosed in the notes

  40. Capital Asset Sales/Losses • Gains & losses on sales of capital assets not reported in governmental fund statements – would violate MFBA • Net proceeds from sales reported as an Other Financing Source

  41. Payments in Lieu of Tax (PILOTs) • Payment from one government to another because payor does not pay taxes • Federal government major payor • Payments within government’s funds • May qualify as PILOT if payor receives something in return – otherwise it is a transfer • Probably should be called interfund service transaction

  42. Escheats • State law indicates when property of people dying intestate, inactive checking & other accounts, or other property must pass to the state • Property so received is a revenue to the state • Capital assets should be recorded in General Capital Assets at fair value

  43. Private Contributions • Rare, but it does occur • Unrestricted donations are revenue in the General Fund • Restricted donations • For the benefit of the government are revenues in SRF, CPF or Permanent Fund • For the benefit of others are revenues in a Private Purpose Trust Fund • Property received via contributions is recorded at fair value

  44. Revenue Budget Revisions • Invariably causes changes in Unreserved Fund Balance • Note entry on page 200 – why is it necessary? Important effect is not in the General Ledger but in the Subsidiary Ledger – need General Ledger entry for audit trail purposes.

  45. Changes in Accounting Principles Two types • Prospective – affects only current and subsequent years • Retroactive – requires restatement of prior years or computation of cumulative effect

  46. Common Causes of Changes • Management decides to change from one acceptable method of accounting to another acceptable method (not common) • Change in circumstances (state) requires change in method of applying acceptable principle • GASB issues new standard that requires change in revenue recognition

  47. Standard Practices • Change is effective at beginning of the year of the change • Cumulative effect [if any] is reported as a restatement of beginning fund balance • Revenues reported under new policy for each year presented • Change is disclosed and explained in the notes to the financial statements

  48. Error Correction 3 step process • Recognize the erroneous entry that was recorded • Determine what the correct entry should be • Fix the error by essentially combining steps 1 & 2

  49. Error Correction Issues • If error is caught in same year, fairly simple process to reverse it and record correction • If error was made in a previous year, must consider if accounts affected have been closed – may result in a “Correction of Prior Year Error”

  50. Identify the error: government accountant incorrectly calculated interest to be accrued – amount recorded was $75; it should have been $100. Error Correction Example – 1

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