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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?
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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? • 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?
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
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”
Flow of business transactions • Exhibit 2, page 56
Will proper recording prevent fraud? • Bottom of page 54
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”
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
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.
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
Examples of other “accounts”: • Cash • Supplies • Accounts Payable
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.
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
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.
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
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.
The hijacking receivable • Page 53
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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)
Solution: Liabilities • Accounts Payable • Credit: (b) • Debit: (f)
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)
But many times proper recoding requires through analysis • Payments in advance
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
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
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.
TRIAL BALANCE • Reports the balance of each ledger account • Aim: TO show that Debits = Credits
In-Class Exercise • Trial balance for Dr. Sharp
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
Possible errors Exhibit 6 • Transposition • Slide
Error Correction • Exhibit 7
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!
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS • Horizontal analysis • Comparing time periods • Exhibit 8