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ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE & REVENUE RECOGNITION Accounting ASW Summer 2004 Issue: What to do about bad debts? So far: Accounts Receivable 420 Sales Revenue 420 Two potential approaches Direct write-off method Allowance method
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ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE & REVENUE RECOGNITION Accounting ASW Summer 2004
Issue: What to do about bad debts? • So far: Accounts Receivable 420 Sales Revenue 420
Two potential approaches • Direct write-off method • Allowance method • Problem 6.13
Direct Write-Off Method • Only allowed for financial reporting if bad debts are immaterial, but required for tax • At the time of sale: No entry • When the account is deemed uncollectible: Bad Debt Expense 1.2 Accounts Receivable 1.2
If the account is later collected: Accounts Receivable 1.2 Bad Debt Expense 1.2 Cash 1.2 Accounts Receivable 1.2 (The entry is made through accounts receivable rather than directly to cash for a record of the accounts receivable having been collected.)
Problems with Direct Write-Off • Accounts Receivable are overstated (in terms of expected receipts) • Net income is overstated • Revenue and expenses are not matched • Discretion affecting net income in when to call “uncollectible”
Allowance Method • Generally required for financial reporting • Record bad debts estimate at time of sale to expense and account receivable contra Bad Debt Expense 8.4 Allow. for Doubtful Accts. (AR contra) 8.4 • Net income effect at time of sale
When the account is deemed uncollectible: All. for Doubtful Accts. 1.2 Accounts Receivable 1.2 • No net income or total asset effect at the time of write-off
If the account is later collected: Accounts Receivable 1.2 All. for Doubtful Accts. 1.2 Cash 1.2 Accounts Receivable 1.2
Advantages of allowance method - Matches revenue and expenses in period of sale - Records net accounts receivable at expected cash collection • Problem with allowance method - Discretion in estimating bad debt expense - Only works well if your estimates are good • Problem 6-13
How to estimate bad debts under the allowance method • Percentage of sales • Aging of accounts receivable • Observation of large accounts • Often use all three together
Other Applications • Sales returns • Cash discounts • Sales allowance
(Gross) Accounts Receivable Beg. Bal. Credit Sales Collections Write-offs Ending Bal. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts Beg. Bal. Write-offs Bad Debt Exp. Ending Bal. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE AND BAD DEBTS T-ACCOUNTS
Income Recognition Issues • Review of revenue recognition criteria • provided all (or substantial portion) of goods or services • have received an asset which can be measured • Issue: What if completion spans several periods?
Long-Term Contracts • Construction spans several periods • Customers and terms decided in advance • May satisfy revenue recognition criteria before completion • Problem 6-22 (slightly different #’s): • $4M contract, • Costs of $0.8M, $2.0M and $0.4M in years 1-3
Completed Contract Method • Delay revenue recognition until completed • For our example, • recognize no income or expense in years 1&2 • accumulate costs in “construction in progress” account (just like “work in progress”) • recognize $4.0M in revenue and $3.2M in expense in year 3
Often used if: • construction in period is too short to justify spreading • buyer or terms are not set • total cost (and hence income) is too uncertain
Percentage Completion Method • Generally preferred by companies • Only used if: • construction spans multiple periods • contract terms are set and collection is likely • total cost (and profit) are reasonably estimable
Recognize revenue each period in proportion to costs during the period • In our example, • 25% of costs occur in year 1, so 25% of revenue, costs and net income would be recognized in year 1 • 62.5% of revenue, costs and NI in year 2 • 12.5% of revenue, costs and NI in year 3