Learn Bookkeeping in 7 Days: Don't Fear the Tax Man
By Rod Caldwell
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About this ebook
Do you dread facing your finances?
Do you constantly fear that the tax man will come knocking?
Learn Bookkeeping in 7 Days is your step-by-step guide to taking the stress out of keeping your books!
This small business guide covers all of the basics, from setting up a general ledger through to confidently conquering your BAS, and all that's in between. In 7 quick and easy steps this book arms you with the knowledge you need to move to more advanced systems and will free up your time to focus on your business.
Packed full of taxation tips, tricks and traps, this is essential reading for all small business owners and anyone wanting to easily and quickly learn bookkeeping.
*Bonus resources can be downloaded from the author's website at www.tpabusiness.com.au.
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Learn Bookkeeping in 7 Days - Rod Caldwell
Preface
Who should read this book?
This book is aimed squarely at the small business operator, often a home-based business, with an annual turnover of less than $2 million. Why less than $2 million? Because that is what the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) uses to define a small business entity that can use cash accounting methods for the purposes of calculating its goods and services tax (GST) and income tax liability. Small businesses with a turnover in excess of $2 million but less than $20 million, classified as small to medium enterprises (SMEs), are required to use accrual accounting, both for Tax Office purposes and to conform with Australian accounting standards. As the concept of accrual accounting is covered in this book, SME operators will also find this book an invaluable resource.
What will I learn?
This book will teach you how to keep cash-based manual accounting records that satisfy your needs for the calculation of your quarterly GST liability and can also be used by your accountant when preparing your annual income tax return. Helpful examples are included, along with useful exercises, all accompanied by a full worked solution. Each exercise has its own set of blank forms, formatted specifically for the requirements of that task. A full set can also be downloaded from my website www.tpabusiness.com.au.
This book as a lecturer’s resource
If you are intending to use this book for a nonaccredited introduction to bookkeeping course, the duration of which is most likely to be six weeks, the seven-day structure that I have designed can still be organised into a six-session module according to your students’ needs. Since most students will not be purchasing inventory or making sales on credit terms, the topics discussed under day 5 can be referred to in passing and the material in day 7 can form the basis of your final class. On the other hand, if you have students who need to know how to account for credit purchases and sales, then include day 5 in your course and explain that the material covered under day 7 is for additional reading after the course is completed.
Additional resources such as PDF versions of the exercise solutions and an online computer-based learning tool are available on my website www.tpabusiness.com.au.
Rod Caldwell
Perth
March 2010
Day 1: Introduction to bookkeeping and accounting
Key terms and concepts
• Small business: defined by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) as a business with an annual turnover of less than $2 million. They are often referred to as micro businesses.
• General ledger account: holds the details of business transactions of the same type.
• Debit: an entry in a general ledger account that represents the economic inflows from a business transaction.
• Credit: an entry in a general ledger account that represents the economic outflows from a business transaction.
• Chart of accounts: a numerical index used within general ledger accounts.
• In all business transactions the economic inflows (debit entries) must equal the economic outflows (credit entries).
So that we’re all on the same page let’s examine the classification structure of business in Australia. The Tax Office defines small businesses with a turnover of under $2 million per year as small business entities and will often refer to them as micro businesses. There are certain taxation concessions available to micro businesses that will be discussed later in this book. Micro businesses usually account for their business transactions under Tax Office rules and on a cash basis.
Classified next are small to medium enterprises (SMEs), also defined by the Tax Office as small businesses, with a turnover in excess of $2 million, and finally large corporate entities, which have a turnover of more than $20 million per year and are often listed on the stock exchange. These enterprises account for their business transactions on an accrual basis under Australian accounting standards, but they still use the same bookkeeping methods as micro businesses.
This book is written for a small family business, probably run from home, with a turnover, that is, your annual ‘business’ sales, of less than $2 million. The main taxation concession available to you is that you can calculate your net income for income tax purposes on a cash basis. If you elect to do this, you can also calculate your goods and services tax (GST) liability on a cash basis. This book assumes that you have elected to use cash accounting for both your income tax and the GST.
It also assumes that your annual turnover exceeds $75 000. If it is less than this amount, you do not have to register for the GST. You can use this book to determine how to keep your records, but ignore the GST information as it will not apply to you.
This book also caters for the SME, the small to medium enterprise, with a turnover in excess of $2 million but less than $20 million per year. As this type of business accounts for its GST and income tax on an accrual basis, the cash accounting sections within this book can be ignored by this business group.
Why keep accounting records?
Accounting is the process of identifying, measuring and com-municating economic information to permit informed judgements and decisions by users of the information. In the case of small business, the users are the owners themselves, using the information to determine the profit made. They also use the information to report their GST liability to their accountant via their quarterly Business Activity Statement (BAS) and calculate their income tax due on an annual basis.
The accounting system identifies and records business tran-sactions through a mechanism known as journals that summarises the information that is then recorded into a set of accounts, based on a system of accounting known as double-entry bookkeeping.
Accounting information, once recorded in the set of accounts, is then communicated using financial statements prepared from those accounts. The recording of the accounting information is called bookkeeping, while the interpretation and reporting of that information is called accounting. The boundary between bookkeeping and accounting is usually considered to be the trial balance, which is a summary of all information entered into the system over a given period. It is from the trial balance that the financial statements are derived.
The main financial accounting statements
The purpose of financial accounting statements is mainly to show the financial position of a business at a particular point in time and to show how that business has performed over a specific period.
The three main financial accounting statements that help achieve this aim are:
• a balance sheet for the business at the end of the reporting period
• the income statement for the reporting period
• a cash flow statement for the reporting period.
A balance sheet shows at a particular point in time what resources are owned by a business (‘assets’) and what it owes to other parties (‘liabilities’). It also shows how much has been invested in the business and what the sources of that investment finance were. It is often helpful to think of a balance sheet as a ‘snapshot’ of the business — a picture of the financial position of the business at a specific point.
By contrast, the income statement (or profit and loss statement as it is also known) provides a perspective for a longer time period. It is the story of what financial transactions took place in a particular period — and (most importantly) what the overall result of those transactions was. Not surprisingly, the profit and loss statement measures ‘profit’. Profit is the amount by which sales revenue (also known as ‘turnover’ or ‘income’) exceeds ‘expenses’ (or ‘costs’) for the period being measured.
The third report, the cash flow statement, reveals details of the source of the business cash inflows and where it expended its cash outflows. Its primary purpose is to provide the reader with details of the liquidity of the business. Further discussion of this statement is beyond the scope of this book.
Accounting versus bookkeeping
Bookkeeping is the processes involved in the ‘correct’ recording of your business transactions. Accounting is the processes involved in taking that information and creating the financial reports. The division between the two lies at the trial balance.
All processes involved up to the trial balance stage, including your bank reconciliation statement and BAS preparation, could be considered to be bookkeeping. The process of taking that trial balance and modifying the figures to meet accounting standards and then producing your balance sheet and income statement, including your income tax return, is considered to be accounting.
This book limits itself to bookkeeping, that is, the recording of accounting information, its verification through the bank reconciliation process to the trial balance and preparation of your quarterly BAS.
The accounting framework
The theory of accounting has developed the concept of a ‘true and fair view’. The true and fair view is a concept that is applied to ensure that your accounts do indeed accurately portray your business activities. Under this concept you should record your business transactions as they truly are and not try to bend the rules to suit your own purposes.
To support the application of the true and fair view, accounting has adopted certain conventions and concepts which help to ensure that accounting information is presented accurately and consistently.
The above discussion is all very well from an academic viewpoint, but from the view of a small business, accounting records are mainly held to satisfy the Tax Office, both for GST and for income tax. However, proper accounting can also be a source of management information that can help your business grow. The timely analysis of your trading activities by comparison against your business plan, operational budget and projected cash flows can help you foresee and correct any problems that may arise before they can adversely affect your business activities.
Small business should aim at completing management tasks with as little effort as possible. But that does not necessarily mean that you do not wish to do it correctly, just as efficiently as possible and to get it right the first time.
The accounting conventions that are most important in this book are:
• monetary. All accounting transactions are expressed in dollar terms.
• entity. You and your business are two separate entities (unlike at law).
• periodic. Your accounting records are divided into periods — usually monthly, quarterly and annually.
Only monetary transactions that lead to you having a legal obligation to pay or receive money, or money equivalent (as in barter), are recorded in your accounting system. The fact that you, as the owner, have particular skills