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GAAP – Accounting Period Cycle – When changes in financial information are reported for a specific period of time in the form of financial statements Fiscal.

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Presentation on theme: "GAAP – Accounting Period Cycle – When changes in financial information are reported for a specific period of time in the form of financial statements Fiscal."— Presentation transcript:

1 GAAP – Accounting Period Cycle – When changes in financial information are reported for a specific period of time in the form of financial statements Fiscal Period – the length of time for which a business summarizes and reports financial information (always report at the end of the fiscal period) *Can be any length of time (usually a year) *Encore Music’s is one month Most businesses use a one year period…that ends during a period of low business activity - January 31 st ….Why?

2 GAAP – Consistent Reporting – When the same accounting procedures are followed in the same way in each accounting period Example: In one year, a delivery business reports the number of deliveries made… 2,650 deliveries The next year, the same company reports the amount of revenue received for the deliveries made… $6,725.00 in revenue Can’t compare them…2 different things

3 Work Sheet – an Internal Document …a planning tool, not a permanent record Why prepare one? 1)To summarize general ledger account balances to prove that debits equal credits (“try” to make them balance = be equal) 2) To plan needed changes to general ledger accounts to bring account balances up to date (make adjustments) 3) To separate general ledger account balances according to the financial statements to be prepared 4) To calculate the amount of net income or net loss for a fiscal period

4 PREPARING THE HEADING OF A WORK SHEET 1 3 2 3. Date of Report shows growth over time, not just information about one day 1. Name of Company 2.Name of Report Lesson 7-1, page 150

5 PREPARING A TRIAL BALANCE ON A WORK SHEET 1 1. Account Titles 4 4.Add Totals 2 2.Account Balances 5 5. Write Totals Lesson 7-1, page 151 6 6.Double Rule Trial balance proves that ledger debits equal ledger credits List accounts in same order as Chart of Accounts All accounts listed (even if there is no balance) 3 3.Single Rule

6 Work Together 7-1 (p152 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-1 (p153 – wb126) Work Together 7-1 (p152 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-1 (p153 – wb126)

7

8 Supplies Account Balance, August 1 4571.00 Supplies on hand (how much I really have) August 31 2187.00 Which one is my current “Balance”? Which one goes on my “Balance Sheet”? So we “Adjust” for the difference (4571-2187=2564)

9 Adjustments GAAP – Matching Expenses with Revenue – applicable when revenue from business activities and expenses associated with earning that revenue are recorded in the same accounting period After we use supplies (pencils, ink, etc.), we no longer have them No longer assets…we need to “expense” them Supplies Account Balance, Aug. 31 4,751.002187.00 Supplies On Hand, Aug 31 Supplies Used During August, Aug 31 2564.00 - = Estimate how much you actually have (in the closets, drawers, etc.) Current Balance

10 SUPPLIES ADJUSTMENT ON A WORK SHEET SUPPLIES become a SUPPLIES EXPENSE 1 1. Write the debit amount. 2 2.Write the credit amount. 3.Label the two parts of this adjustment with a small letter a in parentheses, (a). 3 Lesson 7-2, page 155 - =

11 Prepaid Insurance Account Balance, August 1 1200.00 Value of Prepaid Insurance (how much I really have) August 31 1100.00 Which one is my current “Balance”? Which one goes on my “Balance Sheet”? So we “Adjust” for the difference (1200-1100=100) Jan 1:Paid 1900 Used 100 Balance 1800 Used 100 Balance 1700 Used 100 Balance 1600 Used 100 Balance 1500 Used 100 Balance 1400 Used 100 Balance 1300 Used 100 Balance 1200 Used 100 Balance 1100

12 PREPAID INSURANCE ADJUSTMENT ON A WORK SHEET PREPAID INSURANCE becomes INSURANCE EXPENSE 1 1. Write the debit amount. 2 2.Write the credit amount. 3.Label the two parts of this adjustment with a small letter b in parentheses, (b). 3 Lesson 7-2, page 156 - =

13 PROVING THE ADJUSTMENTS COLUMNS OF A WORK SHEET 1 1. Rule a single line. 2 2.Add both the Adjustments Debit and Credit columns. 3.Rule double lines. 3 Lesson 7-2, page 157

14 Work Together 7-2 (p158 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-2 (p158 – wb126) Work Together 7-2 (p158 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-2 (p158 – wb126)

15 WT a) 456 – 325 = 131 b) 750 – 500 = 250

16 EXTENDING BALANCE SHEET ACCOUNT BALANCES ON A WORK SHEET Assets, Liabilities, Owner’s Equity 2.Debit Balances with Adjustments Remember…this is what you currently have This is the current number for your current financial statements that you are about to prepare 2 3.Credit Balances without Adjustments 3 Lesson 7-3, page 159 1. Debit Balances without Adjustments 1

17 EXTENDING INCOME STATEMENT ACCOUNT BALANCES ON A WORK SHEET Expenses & Revenues 1. Sales Balances 1 3.Expense Balances with Adjustments 3 2.Expense Balances without Adjustments 2 Lesson 7-3, page 160

18 RECORDING NET INCOME, AND TOTALING AND RULING A WORK SHEET Lesson 7-3, page 161 Sales 4411.00 Expenses 3312.00 Did you earn an income or incur a loss? Income: Label it & Calculate it (1099.00) - _______ 1099.00

19 RECORDING NET INCOME, AND TOTALING AND RULING A WORK SHEET 1.Single Rule 1 7 7.Double Rule 2 2.Total 4 4.Extend Net Income 5 5.Single Rule 6 6.Totals Lesson 7-3, page 161 3 3.Net Income Income Statement Credit – Income Statement Debit = Net Income

20 CALCULATING AND RECORDING A NET LOSS ON A WORK SHEET 4.Extend Net Loss 4 3.Net Loss 3 1. Single Rule 1 2.Totals 2 Lesson 7-3, page 162 Overlay – after page 160

21 Work Together 7-3 (p163 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-3 (p163 – wb126) Work Together 7-3 (p163 – wb125) & On Your Own 7-3 (p163 – wb126)

22 WT - = 4320 – 2790 = 1530

23 Work Sheet – an Internal Document …a planning tool, not a permanent record Why prepare one? 1)To summarize general ledger account balances to prove that debits equal credits (“try” to make them balance = be equal) 2) To plan needed changes to general ledger accounts to bring account balances up to date (make adjustments) 3) To separate general ledger account balances according to the financial statements to be prepared 4) To calculate the amount of net income or net loss for a fiscal period

24 CHECKING FOR TYPICAL CALCULATION ERRORS n When two column totals are not in balance, subtract to find the difference. n Check the difference between the two amounts against the following guides: 1.The difference is 1, such as $.01, $.10, $1.00, or $10.00. 2.The difference can be divided evenly by 2. 3.The difference can be divided evenly by 9. 4.The difference is an omitted amount. Lesson 7-4, page 164 Addition Ex. A $48 difference could be a $24 posting error Transposed (54 vs. 45) or Slid (650.00 vs. 65.00) Amount equal to the difference Test Questions

25 CHECKING FOR ERRORS IN THE WORK SHEET n Check for Errors in the Trial Balance Column –Have all general ledger account balances been copied in the Trial Balance column correctly? –Have all general ledger account balances been recorded in the correct Trial Balance column? n Check for Errors in the Adjustments Columns –Do the debits equal the credits for each adjustment? –Is the amount for each adjustment correct? n Check for Errors in Income Statement and Balance Sheet Columns –Has each amount been copied correctly? –Has each amount been extended to the correct column? –Has the net income/loss been calculated correctly? –Has the net income/loss been recorded in the correct column? Lesson 7-4, page 165

26 CORRECTING AN ERROR IN POSTING TO THE WRONG ACCOUNT Lesson 7-4, page 165 2. Correct Entry 2 1. Incorrect Entry 1 Can’t find an error on the work sheet? Re-post from the journal – yikes!

27 CORRECTING AN INCORRECT AMOUNT AND AN AMOUNT POSTED TO THE WRONG COLUMN Lesson 7-4, page 166

28 Work Together 7- 4 (p167 – wb127) & On Your Own 7- 4 (p167 – wb135) Work Together 7- 4 (p167 – wb127) & On Your Own 7- 4 (p167 – wb135)

29 WT

30 Incorrect - 131 WT


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