1 Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 2nd Ed. Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso ELS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
11 Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
Advertisements

Analyzing and Recording Transactions Last Revised: 3/1/2011
Accounting for Transactions and the Financial Statements
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013.
Chapter Three The Double-Entry Accounting System McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Bob Anderson, UCSB Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 4th Ed. Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso CHAPTER 3.
Recording, Storing, & Reporting Accounting Information
CAPTURING ECONOMIC EVENTS
Acct 310 Accounting Review Part I Rick Hayes, Ph.D., CPA California State University L.A.
THE ACCOUNT An account is an individual accounting record of increases and decreases in a specific asset, liability, or owner’s equity item. A company.
3-1 Intermediate Accounting 15th Edition 3 The Accounting Information System Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield.
Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 4th Ed.
Prepared by: Carole Bowman, Sheridan College
The Accounting Information System
1. 2 Chapter 3 THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM.
1 A ccounting Principles, Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel.
Financial Accounting, IFRS Edition
Dr. Mohamed A. Hamada Lecturer of Accounting Information Systems
The Accounting Information System CHAPTER 3. The Accounting Information System The system of:The system of: –Collecting and processing transaction data.
1 Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 2nd Ed. Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso ELS.
Accounting 211 – Chapter 2 The Recording Process
Financial Accounting, Sixth Edition
Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making
Analyzing & Recording Business Transactions
A ccounting Principles, 6e Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Prepared by Marianne Bradford, Ph. D. Bryant College.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 2 Analyzing and Recording Business Transactions.
Chapter 3-1 The Accounting Information System Information System Accounting, Third Edition.
The Recording Process Chapter 2 Accounting Principles, 7th Edition
Analyzing and Recording Transactions Pr. SAMLAL Zoubida.
THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM
Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. The Accounting Information System Chapter 3 Prepared by Carol A. Hartley Providence College.
3-1 THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM Accounting, Fifth Edition 3 Fall 2015.
©2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Financial Accounting, 6/e Harrison/Horngren 1 Processing Accounting Information Chapter 2.
Recording Business Transactions Chapter 2 2-1Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.
After studying this chapter, you should be able to: CHAPTER 2 THE RECORDING PROCESS 1 Explain what an account is and how it helps in the recording process.
THE ACCOUNTS “3 types” ASSETS= LIABILITIES + OWNERS EQUITY Revenue - Expenses = (net income) Drawings / dividend (-) Investments (+)  A company will have.
1 Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 4th Ed. Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso CHAPTER 3 Prepared by Ellen L. Sweatt Georgia Perimeter College.
Balance Sheet, T-Accounts and the Simple Ledger  THE RECORDING PROCESS Unit 2.
THE ACCOUNTS “3 types”  A company will have separate accounts for each item (ex: cash, salaries expense, accounts payable)  an individual accounting.
Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making Prepared by: Dr. Jessica J. Frazier and Philip Li Eastern Kentucky University Kimmel, Weygandt,
Prepared by Kurt M. Hull, MBA CPA California State University, Los Angeles Financial A ccounting, 5e John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel.
Unit 1.2 The Recording Process.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter Four The Double-Entry Accounting System.
3-1 Intermediate Accounting 15th Edition 3 The Accounting Information System Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield.
1 Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso ELS.
The Accounting Information System 3.
Chapter 3. 2 Chapter 3 The Accounting Information System After studying Chapter 3, you should be able to: zAnalyze the effect of business transactions.
Basics of Accounting. Accounting has 3 main activities 1. Identifying  select events that are evidence of economic activity 2. Recording  provide a.
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fourth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011.
Financial Accounting, 4e Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel
Review of Accounting Information System 3.
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING Tools for Business Decision-Making KIMMEL  WEYGANDT  KIESO  TRENHOLM  IRVINE CHAPTER 3: THE ACCOUNTING INFORMATION SYSTEM.
3 The Accounting Information System Kimmel ● Weygandt ● Kieso
Financial Accounting John J. Wild Seventh Edition John J. Wild Seventh Edition Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction.
THE RECORDING PROCESS CHAPTER 2. THE ACCOUNT An account is an individual accounting record of increases and decreases in a specific asset, liability,
Chapter 2: Recording Business Transactions. Learning Objectives: Use accounting terms: describe the basic tools of an accounting system, the account, the.
Chapter 3-1. Chapter 3-2 The Accounting Information System Information System Financial Accounting, Fifth Edition.
After studying this chapter, you should be able to: CHAPTER 2 THE RECORDING PROCESS 1 Explain what an account is and how it helps in the recording process.
3 The Accounting Information System Kimmel ● Weygandt ● Kieso
Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 3rd Ed.
University of California, Santa Barbara
Accounting, Fifth Edition
Financial Accounting, IFRS Edition
Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 3rd Ed.
Accounting, Fifth Edition
Financial Accounting, Sixth Edition
Financial Accounting, Fifth Edition
Student Version Repetition is an important component, a key part of learning. In memory, the more times patterns of thought are repeated, the more likely.
Presentation transcript:

1 Financial Accounting: Tools for Business Decision Making, 2nd Ed. Kimmel, Weygandt, Kieso ELS

Chapter 3

3 Chapter 3 The Accounting Information System After studying Chapter 3, you should be able to: zAnalyze the effect of business transactions on the basic accounting equation. zExplain what an account is and how it helps in the recording process. zDefine debits and credits and explain how they are used to record business transactions. zIdentify the basic steps in the recording process.

4 After studying Chapter 3, you should be able to: zExplain what a journal is and how it helps in the recording process. zExplain what a ledger is and how it helps in the recording process. zExplain what posting is and how it helps in the recording process. zExplain the purposes of a trial balance. Chapter 3 The Accounting Information System

5 The Accounting Information System The system of: collecting and processing transaction data and communicating financial information to interested parties.

6 The Accounting Information System Analyze the effect of business transactions on the basic accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Stockholders’ Equity

7 The Accounting Information System The Accounting Equation must always balance.

8 The Accounting Information System zAccounting transactions are events that must be recorded in the Financial Statements.

9 The Accounting Information System zTransactions are events that must be recorded in the Financial Statements zTransaction Analysis determines the impact on the Balance Sheet.

Is the financial position (assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity) of the company changed? Illustration 3-1

Let’s Practice Transaction Analysis

a) On July 1, Cash of $95,000 was invested in the business in exchange for $95,000 worth of common stock.

b) Peoples, Inc., acquired land by paying $60,000 cash to Nashtown, Inc

c) Peoples, Inc., purchased an estimated three month supply of office supplies on account. The company will pay $600 for these supplies later.

d) Peoples, Inc., received $800 for services performed.

e) Peoples, Inc., performed services for $2,000. The company will be paid later in the month.

f) Peoples, Inc., received confirmation that a major corporation has selected their corporation to perform major consulting work. The work will start January 1 of next year. NO TRANSACTION

g) Peoples, Inc., purchased office equipment for $6,000. The Company signed a 2-year note with ACME Office Equipment Company.

h) Peoples, Inc., paid $1,800 for a 1-year license to operate as a business. The license expires June 30th of next year.

i) Peoples, Inc., collected $800 of the money owed from (e).

j ) Peoples, Inc., paid $400 of the amount it owed from (c).

k) An employee has worked and earned $600 which was paid during the month.

l) Peoples, Inc., received a $5,000 retainer to handle a tax audit that the company will start next month.

m) Peoples, Inc., paid $500 for rent during the month.

n) Dividends of $700 were paid during the month.

107,200

27 an individual accounting record of increases and decreases in a specific Asset, Liability, or Stockholders’ Equity item. Account...

28 Three parts : 1) the Title of the account 2) a left or Debit side 3) a right or Credit side Account

29 TITLE DEBITCREDIT The T Account

30 Total the Entries to Each Side Total DebitsTotal Credits TITLE DebitCredit

Balancing an Account Illustration 3-4 Tabular SummaryAccount Form

32 Normal Balances

33 Normal Balances

34 Total the Entries to Each Side If the greater sum is on the left, the account has a Debit Balance Total DebitsTotal Credits TITLE DebitCredit

35 Total the Entries to Each Side If the greater sum is on the right, the account has a Credit Balance Total DebitsTotal Credits TITLE DebitCredit

Whichever side you increase is the normal side!

37 Debits Increase assets and expenses Decrease liabilities, common stock and revenues

38 Credits Decrease assets and expenses Increase liabilities, common stock and revenues

39 Analyze each transaction Enter each transaction in a journal Transfer journal information to ledger accounts Page 109 in book Illustration 3-15 Illustration 3-16

40 The Recording Process zAnalyze each transaction zEnter information in a journal zTransfer the information to the appropriate accounts

41 The Journal... is an accounting record where the transactions are recorded in chronological order.

42 Journals zCash receipts zCash disbursements zSales zPurchases zGeneral Types of Journals

43 Journals zDisclosing in one place the complete effect of a transaction; zProviding a chronological record of transactions; zHelping prevent or locate errors because debit and credit amounts can be easily compared. Journals aid the recording process by:

DateDebit Credit GENERAL JOURNAL Account Titles and Explanations 2001 Oct. 1 Cash 10,000 Common Stock 10,000 (Invested cash in business) 1 Cash 5,000 Notes Payable 5,000 (Issued 3-month, 12% note payable for cash) 2 Office Equipment 5,000 Cash 5,000 (Purchased office equipment for cash) Illustration 3-17

45 The General Ledger the entire group of accounts maintained by a company contains all the asset, liability, and stockholders’ equity accounts

46 The General Ledger Illustration 3-18

47 The Ledger The entries from the journal are posted to the ledger,usually in summary form, except for the general journal.

48 Posting Transferring information from the journals to the general ledger accounts

GENERAL JOURNAL Account Titles and Explanations 2001 Oct. 1 Cash 10,000 Common Stock 10,000 Balance Acct 1010 Account CASH Date Acct 3010 Account COMMON STOCK DateBalance debit credit debit credit ref Posting Entries

GENERAL JOURNAL Account Titles and Explanations 1998 Oct. 1 Cash 10,000 Common Stock 10,000 Balance Acct 1010 Account CASH Date Acct 3010 Account COMMON STOCK DateBalance debit credit debit credit ref Oct 1 gj 1 10,000 Posting Entries

GENERAL JOURNAL Account Titles and Explanations 1998 Oct. 1 Cash 10,000 Common Stock 10,000 Balance Acct 1010 Account CASH Date Acct 3010 Account COMMON STOCK DateBalance debit credit debit credit ref Oct 1 gj 1 10,000

52 Trial Balance A list of all the accounts and their balances at a given time. It serves to prove the mathematical equality of debits and credits after posting. It aids in the preparation of financial statements.

Sierra Corporation Trial Balance October 31, 2001 Debit Credit Cash $15,200 Advertising Supplies 2,500 Prepaid Insurance 600 Office Equipment 5,000 Notes Payable $ 5,000 Accounts Payable 2,500 Unearned Service Revenue 1,200 Common Stock 10,000 Dividends 500 Service Revenue 10,000 Salaries Expense 4,000 Rent Expense 900 $28,700 $28,700 Illustration 3-33