1 / 25

ACCOUNTING 101

ACCOUNTING 101. CHAPTER ONE: Asset, Liability, Owner’s Equity,Revenue, and Expense Accounts. The Fundamental Accounting Equation. Assets=Liabilities+Owner’s Equity The three major classifications ALOE, the memory tool. ASSETS. Property or things of value owned by an economic unit CASH

ally
Download Presentation

ACCOUNTING 101

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. ACCOUNTING 101 CHAPTER ONE: Asset, Liability, Owner’s Equity,Revenue, and Expense Accounts

  2. The Fundamental Accounting Equation • Assets=Liabilities+Owner’s Equity • The three major classifications • ALOE, the memory tool

  3. ASSETS • Property or things of value owned by an economic unit • CASH • SUPPLIES • EQUIPMENT • BUILDING • LAND

  4. OWNER’S EQUITY • Owner’s equity: owner’s claim, investment, net worth, or proprietorship • Owner’s name followed by the word “CAPITAL” • Owner withdrawals of cash or assets for personal use

  5. Partial Equation • ASSETS=OWNER’S EQUITY • Property or things of value owned by the business=Owner’s right to or investment in the business • Assets ($60,000)=OE ($60,000)(p8) • Here, nothing is owed against the assets…no liabilities.

  6. LIABILITIES • Liabilities are debts or amounts owed to the creditors • The business entity may have bought goods or services on credit or borrowed money or created some obligation to pay • Creditors’ claims to business assets have priority over the owner’s claim

  7. The Fundamental Accounting Equation • Assets=Liabilities + Owner’s Equity • ? = $4,000 + $16,000 • $20,000 = $4,000 + $16,000 (p9) • $20,000 = ? + $16,000 • $20,000 = $4,000 + ? • The equation must stay in balance!

  8. Finding the unknown part of the equation • Determine the owner’s equity • Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity • $38,000= $5,000 + ? • Do the math!………………$33,000 (OE) • $38,000 = $5,000 + $33,000 • Balanced!

  9. Finding the unknown part of the equation • Determine the liabilities • Assets = Liabilities + Owner’s Equity • $68,000 = ? + $22,000 (p9) • Do the math! • $68,000 = $46,000 + $22,000 • Balanced!

  10. Recording Business Transactions • Remember? Business transactions are events that effect the operations of the economic unit. • Each business transaction must be recorded under the appropriate three classifications and then the appropriate “account” under these classifications… • Each side of the equation must always balance!

  11. Recording Business Transactions • Owner (Cline) deposits $82,000 in a bank account in name of business (separate entity). (P10) Transaction (a) • Asset(classification)=Liabilities(class-ification) + Owner’s Equity (classification) • Asset/Cash (Account)=Liabilities + Owner’s Equity/Capital (Account) • $82,000Asset/Cash = $82,000/Capital/OE • Balanced with no Liabilities!

  12. Recording Business Transactions • Cline buys equipment paying $64,000 cash out of the $82,000 cash on hand in bank (see p11) • Cash goes down by $64,000 • Cash remaining is $18,000 • Equipment goes up by $64,000 • Left side of equation is still $82,000 and is balanced with right side! • $64,000 from cash account and $64,000 into equipment account is a double-entry notation…

  13. Double-Entry Accounting • Double-entry means that each transaction must be recorded in at least two accounts keeping the equation in balance • Review Transaction (b) on p. 11 • Two entries were made: $64,000 taken out of cash account • $64,000 put into equipment account • Cash and equipment are assets and found on the left side of the equation

  14. Another Business Transaction • What if we buy equipment on account or on credit? See p. 11 Transaction (c ) • Cline buys $10,000 of equipment on account creating a liability • Equipment (Asset) increases by $10,000 on left side of equation • Accounts Payable (Liability) increases by $10,000 on right side of equation • Each side is now totaled at $92,000 and balanced but how and why?

  15. Double-entry Accounting • Review Transaction (c ) again p11 • We increased the Assets by $10,000 by buying more Equipment (an asset). Asset classifications are located on left side of equation and Equipment is an asset account • We increased our Liabilities by $10,000 by buying more equipment on credit. • Therefore, the Accounts Payable account under the Liabilities classification is increased over on the right side of the equation. Ah-Ha! A double-entry!

  16. Double-entry Accounting • Please look at Transaction (d) p12 • Here we pay down the Accounts Payable by $6,000 leaving a balance of $4,000 in this account • We take the $6,000 out of the Cash Account to pay down Accounts Payable leaving $12,000 in cash. • Therefore, Cash is reduced AND Accounts Payable is reduced! • Another double-entry notation and we still balance left side to right side.

  17. Double-entry AccountingAnother Business Transaction • Owner invests equipment into business valued at $6,200-Transaction (e) • This will increase the Equipment Account balance by $6,200 as well as the Capital Account balance by $6,200 • Again, another double-entry notation: one on the left side and one on the right side! • The balance now is $92,200 left and right

  18. Review these Transactions • p13-Summary of Transactions a-e

  19. Chart of Accounts • Official list of accounts tailor-made for the business by the Accountant. Any changes must be approved by Management… • Assets #100’s see p14 • Liabilities #200’s • Owner’s Equity #300 • Revenue (increase in OE) #400’s • Expenses (decrease in OE) #500’s

  20. Revenue and Expense Accounts • These fall under the Owner’s Equity classification • Revenue (Income) increases Owner’s Equity • Expenses (Bills) decrease Owner’s Equity • Revenue is recognized when earned whether in cash or sold on credit • Cash revenue will increase the Cash Account • Services sold on credit will increase Accounts Receivable account

  21. Revenue example • P15 Transaction (f) Company sold services for cash in the amount of $3,520. Revenue Account is increased by $3,520 and the Cash Account is increased by $3,520 (left side and right side double-entry notation) • Each side is balanced

  22. Expense example • P15 Transaction (g) Company paid the rent for the month in amount of $900. • Cash Account is decreased by $900 • Rent Expense Account (under the Expense classification) is increased by $900

  23. Introducing new Asset Accounts • Prepaid Insurance p18 • Accounts Receivable

  24. Summary of Sample Transaction p21 • Let’s take a look at p21 in text • Transactions f-s • What happened at Cline’s Computer? • Some things happened on the left side of the equation: Cash, Equipment, Prepaid Insurance, Accounts Receivable • Some things happened on the right side of the equation: Accounts Payable, Cline/ Capital, Revenue, and then less Expenses • $96,770=$96,770: Balanced

  25. The Demonstration Problem

More Related