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3–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus.

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Presentation on theme: "3–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus."— Presentation transcript:

1 3–1 McQuaig Bille 1 College Accounting 10 th Edition McQuaig Bille Nobles © 2011 Cengage Learning PowerPoint presented by Douglas Cloud Professor Emeritus of Accounting, Pepperdine University Chapter 3 The General Journal and the General Ledger

2 3–2 The General Journal  A journal is a book in which business transactions are recorded as they happen.  In the journal, both the debits and the credits of the entire transaction are recorded in one place.  A journal is called a book of original entry because the first place an entry is recorded is in the journal.  The process of recording business transactions in a journal is called journalizing.  Information about transactions come from source documents that furnish proof that a transaction has taken place.  The basic journal form is the two-column general journal.

3 3–3 Transaction (a). June 1: J. Conner deposited $90,000 in a bank account in the name of Conner’s Whitewater Adventures. This is the first transaction for the company, so “1” is entered as the page number. Next, we enter the date.

4 3–4 J. Conner, Capital increases, so it is credited. Analyze the Transaction Using the T- Account Approach Cash increases, so it is debited.

5 3–5 Indent again for the explanation. Journal Entry Notice that the account title for the credit is indented. Account title

6 3–6 Transaction (b). June 2: Conner’s Whitewater Adventures bought equipment, paying cash, $38,000. Skip a line between entries.

7 3–7 Transaction (c). June 3: Conner’s Whitewater Adventures bought equipment on account from Signal Products, $4,320. Note that the month and year are not repeated unless they change or a new journal page begins.

8 3–8 The Cost Principle  When a business buys an asset, the asset should be recorded at the actual cost (the agreed amount of a transaction).  This is called the cost principle.  Assume in Transaction (c) that Signal Products had been asking $7,500 for the equipment.  The cost of the equipment to Conner’s Whitewater Adventures is $4,320, so that is the amount recorded.

9 3–9 Transaction (d). June 4: Conner’s Whitewater Adventures paid Signal Products, a creditor, on account,$2,000.

10 3–10 Example of Journal Entries

11 3–11 Posting to the General Ledger  The journal is the book of original entry because each transaction must first be recorded in full in the journal.  The ledger account gives us a complete record of the transactions recorded in each individual account.  The general ledger contains all the accounts.  The process of transferring information from the journal to the ledger is called posting.

12 3–12 The Chart of Accounts A chart of accounts is the official list of the ledger accounts in which transactions of a business are recorded. Conner’s Whitewater Adventure Chart of Accounts

13 3–13 $90,000 ‒ $38,000 equals $52,000 3-26 General Ledger Example

14 3–14

15 3–15 The Posting Process STEP 1. Write the date of the transaction in the account’s Date column. STEP 2. Write the amount of the transaction in the Debit or Credit column, and enter the balance in the Balance column under Debit or Credit. STEP 3. Write the page number of the journal in the Post. Ref. column of the ledger account. (This is a cross-reference; it tells you where the amount came from.) STEP 4. Record the ledger account number in the Post. Ref. column of the journal.

16 3–16 Posting from the General Journal to the General Ledger 1.Date of transaction 2.Amount of transaction 3.Page number of the journal 4.Ledger account number

17 3–17 General Ledger After Posting

18 3–18 Preparation of the Trial Balance  The trial balance is simply a list of accounts that have balances.  Even when the debit and credit balances are equal, other types of errors may slip through— for example, 1.Posting the correct debit or credit amounts to the incorrect account. 2.Neglecting to journalize or post an entire transaction.

19 3–19

20 3–20 Notice that the zero balance on October 29 is indicated by long dashes in both the Debit and Credit columns. Zero Balances

21 3–21 Steps in the Accounting Process STEP 1.Record the transaction of a business in a journal. STEP 2.Post entries to the accounts in the ledger. STEP 3.Prepare a trial balance.

22 3–22 Source Document

23 3–23 Journal Entry Related to Source Document Journal Entry Related to Source Document

24 3–24 Manual Ruling Method Manually Correcting Errors Before Posting Has Taken Place An entry to record payment of $1,500 rent was incorrectly debited to Salary Expense.

25 3–25 Manual Ruling Method Manually Correcting Errors Before Posting Has Taken Place An entry for $120 payment for office supplies was recorded as $210.

26 3–26 Manual Ruling Method Manually Correcting Errors After Posting Has Taken Place An entry to record cash received for professional fees was correctly journalized as $400. However, it was posted as a debit to Cash and a credit to Professional Fees for $4,000.

27 3–27 Correcting Entry Method— Manual or Computerized The correcting entry method is used when incorrectly journalized amounts have been posted. There are two correcting entry methods. 1.One-step method. Simply make one entry that undoes the error and provides the correct account. 2.Two-step method. The first step reverses the error made by the original entry. The second step includes the correct entry.

28 3–28 Jan. 9: A $620 payment for advertising was incorrectly journalized and posted as a debit to Miscellaneous Expense and a credit to Cash for $620. The error was discovered on January 27. The following correction uses the one-step method:

29 3–29 The following correction uses the two-step method:


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