1 / 14

Module 9 Managing Donations and Pledges

Module 9 Managing Donations and Pledges. There are several sources of income. In the previous module, we learned that there were several sources of income for an agency Sources of cash inflows Government grants Donations and pledges Fees for services Endowment interest

Download Presentation

Module 9 Managing Donations and Pledges

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Module 9 Managing Donations and Pledges Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  2. There are several sources of income • In the previous module, we learned that there were several sources of income for an agency • Sources of cash inflows • Government grants • Donations and pledges • Fees for services • Endowment interest • In this module we will specifically look at the implications of donations and pledges • Donation is a gift paid on the spot • Pledge is a promise to pay a gift in the future Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  3. Pledges Receivable • Any receivable is an amount due from another party (donor, endowment fund, government) • Common examples are: • Pledges Receivable – amounts due from donors • Grants Receivable – amounts due from government as a result of contracts • Interest Receivable – amounts due as a result of investment Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  4. Valuing Receivables • But, not all donors will pay their pledges. • Some people forget, some over commit, or things change and they can’t pay the money they once thought they could pay • Therefore, agencies need to make allowance for a certain percentage of pledges which never materialize into actual payments • We call these pledges Bad Debt (Offerings) • So, why do agencies accept pledges in the first place? • A pledge is a commitment to make a donation in the future • It allows someone to offer a gift even if they can’t pay on the spot • Thus, pledges are a vehicle to stimulate gifts. It allows people to give who may not otherwise be able to give • The cost of pledges (a few donors who don’t pay), is likely smaller than the benefits (gifts that otherwise may not be given) Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  5. Valuing Receivables • How do we account for Bad Debt (Bad Offerings) • First, we need to estimate the amount we should expect not to be paid (based on historical patterns) • We must estimate because • we will need to apply an expense caused by bad debt in the current accounting period (remember, the matching principles says you need to match expenses in the same period as the revenues they helped to generate • And, we actually don’t know which giver won’t pay yet and we won’t know until we know (you know what I mean) • Once we have an amount, we will create an AR “contra-account” • A contra-account reduces an account to provide a more conservative position (an allowance for doubtful accounts) Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  6. Estimating Bad Debt Expense • There are many ways to estimate bad pledges but we’ll talk about Aging Pledges Receivable • The older a receivable is, generally the less likely it will be collected. • An Aging Analysis groups receivables by age (1-30 days, 30-60 days, 60+ days, as an example), then applies different %ages to different groups to estimate Bad Debt • Again, we make the adjustment considering the opening balance and the required outcome (We’ll see this by example in a minute) Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  7. Example Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  8. Recording Estimated Bad Debt • As mentioned earlier, we will create a sub-account for each customer who buys on credit • We’ll also create an AR “contra-account” where we can store allowances for doubtful accounts. This contra-account is not named to any one donor as we do not know yet which donor will default on their credit • The Bad Debt expense account is just like any other expense account • The “Allowance” account is the contra-account. It would be illustrated on the Balance Sheet as shown next… Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  9. Recording Estimated Bad Debt • Notice how the AR account itself is untouched in the previous journal entry • The T-accounts look like this Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  10. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts • The Allowance for Doubtful Accounts account is shown against the AR account • To avoid overstating assets, this contra-account reduces AR to reflect an amount that can be expected to be collected Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  11. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts • The Bad Debt Expense account is shown against the Revenue for the period • The Bad Debt Expense account reduces the revenue by the same amount that the contra-account reduces AR Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  12. Writing off Bad Debt • So lets say our donor defaulted on the payment for a pledge: • We would write down a specific pledges receivable account • This will write down the overall AR account in the GL • And reduce the remaining Allowance for Doubtful Accounts • The Balance Sheet now looks like… Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  13. Writing off Bad Debt • After writing down the Firby Pledges Receivable subledger account, we notice that the Net AR account (AR less Allowance for Doubtful Accts) is not changed • That’s because we already allowed for the doubtful account Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

  14. Recovering Bad Debt • So we assumed a customer would not pay, so we wrote down his account • But now he has come back and paid, at least partly. • The transactions are simply the reverse of the write down: • First, restore the Allowance and the AR subledger • Then take the cash and run Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP

More Related