Posts tagged ‘Balance Sheet’

I would like to start speaking about this topic with defining what accounting is. So accounting is keeping financial records, recording income & expenditure, valuing assets& liabilities, eleberation of budjets & so on. We can devide accounting into two large groups.

Accounting:

Financial accounting

preparing financial statements of various kinds

- financial statements

- tax reterns -

is used for:

Managerial accounting

preparing financial information,

necessary for the company itself;

- controlling

- marketing & management

- pricing

- negotiations

- analyzing the flows of capital

But also there are a lot of other kinds of accounting, such as:

Cost accounting – working out the unit cost of products, including materials, labour & all othe expenses.

Tax accounting – calculating an individual’s or a company’s liability for tax.

“Creative accounting” (or “window dressing”) – using all available accounting procedures & tricks to disguise the true financial position of a company.

Also at the begining of the topic I would like to stress, that we shouldn’t muddle accounting with bookkeeping. Bookkeeping is just writing down (recording) all the details of transactions (debits & credits). Bookkeepers have to record every purchase and sale that a business makes, in the order that they take place, in journals. At a later date, these temporary records are entered in or posted to the relevant account book or ledger. At the end of an accounting period, all the relevant totals are transferred to the profit and loss account. Double-entry bookkeeping records the dual effect of every transaction – a value both receives and parted with. Payments made or debits are entered of the left-hand (debtors) side of an account, and payments received or credits on the right-hand side. Bookkeepers periodically do a trial balance to test whether both sides of an account book match.

Continue reading ‘Accounting & balance sheet’ »

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Congratulations, you just bought a new truck for your landscaping business. You will now be more efficient because you no longer have to travel back and forth to get your tools to the job site. This new asset will take your business to the next level and you can now compete for those large jobs the competition gets every day. The question is, “how do you account for this large expense in your financial statements to your investors and your tax returns?” Depreciation is the accounting tool that allows you to account for the cost of this new asset.

Depreciation is an application of the matching principle. The purchase or buildings and equipment are recorded at their original cost. In our example, the new landscaping truck costs $30K, but the financial benefit from this new vehicle will not be realized until future jobs are earned. Therefore it is necessary to come up with some correlation between this expensive asset and the future economic benefit it brings to the company. Depreciation is that correlation. At face value, some think depreciation is just a recalculation of the new market value of an asset. This is not the case; depreciation applies a portion of that initial expense to the revenue earned for a given period of time. We will explore this relationship and how they are applied through straight-line depreciation and accelerated depreciation.

Straight-line depreciation takes the total cost of an asset, in our case $30K for the new truck, and divides it by the years of life for that asset. The straight-line depreciation method is most often used for reporting to stockholders because in early years it accounts for lower depreciation expense and therefore maximizes the revenue for that period. In our example, the trucks useful life is 10 years so we would take $30K and divide by 10 years to come up with yearly depreciation of $3K. During every fiscal year $3K would be applied to the income statement as an expense and reduce net income by $3K.

Continue reading ‘Appreciation for Depreciation’ »