Transcript
The Accounting Cycle: During the Period
Quiz Questions
1. Which of the following does not represent an external business transaction?
a. Purchasing office supplies.
b. Paying employees’ salaries.
c. Expiration of an insurance policy over time.
d. Providing services to customers.
2. Which step in the process of measuring external transactions involves assessing the equality of total debits and total credits?
a. Use source documents to determine accounts affected by the transaction.
b. Preparing a trial balance.
c. Analyze the impact of the transaction on the accounting equation.
d. Post the transaction to the T-account in the general ledger.
3. Which of the following transactions causes an increase in total liabilities?
a. Pay maintenance expense for the current month.
b. Provide services to customers on account.
c. Pay dividends to stockholders.
d. Purchase office supplies on account.
4. Which of the following transactions causes a decrease in stockholders’ equity?
a. Pay salaries expense for the current month.
b. Repay amount borrowed from the bank.
c. Provide services to customers for cash.
d. Provide services to customers on account.
5. Which of the following is possible for a particular business transaction?
a. Increase assets; decrease liabilities.
b. Decrease assets; increase stockholders’ equity.
c. Decrease assets; decrease liabilities.
d. Decrease liabilities; increase expenses.
6. A debit is used to decrease which of the following accounts?
a. Salaries Expense.
b. Accounts Payable.
c. Dividends.
d. Supplies.
7. A credit is used to decrease which of the following accounts?
a. Service Revenue.
b. Common Stock.
c. Salaries Payable.
d. Cash.
8. Purchasing office supplies on account for $100 is recorded as:
a. Supplies
100
Accounts Payable
100
b. Cash
100
Supplies
100
c. Supplies
100
Cash
100
d. Accounts Payable
100
Supplies
100
9. Transferring the debit and credit information from a journal to individual accounts in the general ledger is referred to as:
a. Balancing.
b. Analyzing.
c. Posting.
d. Journalizing.
10. Which of the following is true about a trial balance?
a. Only income statement accounts are shown.
b. Total debit amounts should always equal total credit amounts.
c. Only balance sheet accounts are shown.
d. The trial balance shows the change in all account balances over the accounting period.
Problem #1
A company has the following transactions during June:
June 2 Provide services to customers for cash, $4,300
June 8 Purchase office supplies on account, $1,000.
June 11 Pay workers’ salaries for the current period, $1,400.
June 15 Issue additional shares of common stock, $6,000.
June 28 Pay one-half of the amount owed for supplies purchased on June 8.
Required:
Indicate how each transaction affects the accounting equation.
Solution:
Assets
=
Liabilities
?
Stockholders’ Equity
June 2
+ $4,300
=
+
+ $4,300
June 8
+ $1,000
=
+ $1,000
+
June 11
? $1,400
=
+
? $1,400
June 15
+ $6,000
=
+
+ $6,000
June 28
? $500
=
? $500
+
+ $9,400
=
+ $500
+
+ $8,900
Problem #2
A company has the following transactions during June:
June 2 Provide services to customers for cash, $4,300
June 8 Purchase office supplies on account, $1,000.
June 11 Pay workers’ salaries for the current period, $1,400.
June 15 Issue additional shares of common stock, $6,000.
June 28 Pay one-half of the amount owed for supplies purchased on June 8.
Required:
For each transaction, (1) identify the two accounts involved, (2) the type of account, (3) whether the transaction increases or decreases the account balance, and (4) whether the increase or decrease would be recorded with a debit or credit.
Solution:
Date
(1)
Accounts Involved
(2)
Account Type
(3)
Increase or Decrease
(4)
Debit or Credit
June 2
Cash
Asset
Increase
Debit
Service Revenue
Revenue
Increase
Credit
June 8
Supplies
Asset
Increase
Debit
Accounts Payable
Liability
Increase
Credit
June 11
Salaries Expense
Expense
Increase
Debit
Cash
Asset
Decrease
Credit
June 15
Cash
Asset
Increase
Debit
Common Stock
Stockholders’ Eq.
Increase
Credit
June 28
Accounts Payable
Liability
Decrease
Debit
Cash
Asset
Decrease
Credit
Problem #3
A company has the following transactions during June:
June 2 Provide services to customers for cash, $4,300
June 8 Purchase office supplies on account, $1,000.
June 11 Pay workers’ salaries for the current period, $1,400.
June 15 Issue additional shares of common stock, $6,000.
June 28 Pay one-half of the amount owed for supplies purchased on June 8.
Required:
Record each transaction.
Solution:
Debit
Credit
June 2
Cash
4,300
Service Revenue
(Provide services for cash)
4,300
June 8
Supplies
1,000
Accounts Payable
(Purchase supplies on account)
1,000
June 11
Salaries Expense
1,400
Cash
(Pay salaries)
1,400
June 15
Cash
6,000
Common Stock
(Issue common stock for cash)
6,000
June 28
Accounts Payable
500
Cash
(Pay on account)
500
Key Points
Identify the basic steps in measuring external transactions.
External transactions are transactions between the company and separate economic entities.
Internal transactions do not include an exchange with a separate economic entity.
The six-step measurement process (Illustration 2–1) is the foundation of financial accounting.
Analyze the impact of external transactions on the accounting equation.
After each transaction, the accounting equation must always remain in balance. In other words, assets always must equal liabilities plus stockholders’ equity.
The expanded accounting equation demonstrates that revenues increase retained earnings while expenses and dividends decrease retained earnings. Retained earnings is a component of stockholders’ equity.
Assess whether the impact of external transactions results in a debit or credit to an account balance.
For the basic accounting equation (Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity), assets (left side) increase with debits. Liabilities and stockholders’ equity (right side) increase with credits. The opposite is true to decrease any of these accounts.
The retained earnings account is a stockholders’ equity account that normally has a credit balance. The retained earnings account has three components—revenues, expenses, and dividends. Revenues increase the balance of retained earnings, while expenses and dividends decrease the balance of retained earnings. Therefore, we increase revenues with a credit (similar to increasing retained earnings) and increase expenses and dividends with a debit (similar to decreasing retained earnings).
Record transactions using debits and credits.
For each transaction, total debits must equal total credits.
Post transactions to T-accounts in the general ledger.
Posting is the process of transferring the debit and credit information from transactions recorded in the journal to the T-accounts in the general ledger.
Prepare a trial balance.
A trial balance is a list of all accounts and their balances at a particular date. Debits must equal credits, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that all account balances are correct.
Common Mistakes
Common Mistake
It’s sometimes tempting to decrease cash as a way of recording an investor’s initial investment. However, we account for transactions from the company’s perspective, and the company received cash from the stockholder.
Common Mistake
Don’t let the account name fool you. Even though the term revenue appears in the account title for unearned revenue, this is not a revenue account. Unearned indicates that the company has yet to earn this revenue and therefore is still obligated to provide the service in the future. This current obligation creates a liability.
Common Mistake
Students often believe a payment of dividends to owners increases stockholders’ equity. Remember, you are accounting for the resources of the company. While stockholders have more personal cash after dividends have been paid, the company in which they own stock has fewer resources (less cash).
Common Mistake
Some students think the term “debit” always means increase and “credit” always means decrease. While this is true for assets, it is not true for liabilities and stockholders’ equity. Liabilities and stockholders’ equity increase with a credit and decrease with a debit.
Common Mistake
Many students forget to indent the credit account names. For the account credited, be sure to indent both the account name and the amount.
Common Mistake
Students sometimes hear the phrase “assets are the debit accounts” and believe it indicates that assets can only be debited. This is incorrect! Assets, or any account, can be either debited or credited. Rather, this phrase indicates that debiting the asset account will increase the balance, and that an asset account normally will have a debit balance. Similarly, the phrase “liabilities and stockholders’ equity are the credit accounts” does not mean that these accounts cannot be debited. They will be debited when their balances decrease. Rather, the phrase means that crediting the liabilities and stockholders’ equity accounts increases their balances, and they normally will have a credit balance.
Common Mistake
Be careful. Just because the debits and credits are equal in a trial balance does not necessarily mean that all balances are correct. A trial balance could contain offsetting errors. For example, if we overstate cash and revenue each by $1,000, both accounts will be in error, but the trial balance will still balance, since the overstatement to cash increases debits by $1,000 and the overstatement to revenue increases credits by $1,000.
Decision Points
Question
Accounting Information
Analysis & Decision
How much profit has a company earned over its lifetime for its owners and retained for use in the business?
Retained earnings
The balance of retained earnings provides a record of all revenues and expenses (which combine to make net income) less dividends over the life of the company.
Question
Accounting Information
Analysis & Decision
How does the accounting system capture the effects of a company’s external transactions?
Journal entries, General ledger, Account balances
The effects of external transactions are summarized by recording increases and decreases to account balances during the year.
Career Corner
Career Corner
The accuracy of account balances is essential for providing useful information to decision makers, such as investors and creditors. That’s why the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires all companies with publicly traded stock to have their reported account balances verified by an independent auditor. Independent auditors use their understanding of accounting principles and business practices to provide an opinion of reasonable assurance that account balances are free from material misstatements resulting from errors and fraud. Tens of thousands of audits are conducted each year, and auditors are highly successful in detecting and correcting both intentional and unintentional errors. Because of the huge demand for auditors, many accounting majors choose auditing, also referred to as public accounting, as their first career. Only a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) may sign an audit opinion.