Basic Financial Accounting and Reporting: Ishmael Y. Reyes, CPA
Basic Financial Accounting and Reporting: Ishmael Y. Reyes, CPA
Basic Financial Accounting and Reporting: Ishmael Y. Reyes, CPA
Reporting
Definitions of Accounting
Accounting is a service activity. It’s function is to provide quantitative information,
primarily financial in nature, about economic entities that is intended to be useful in making
economic decisions - Accounting Standards Council
Types of Businesses
Although the fundamental business model does not vary, there are infinite ways of
applying it to provide the range of products and services that make up the business world.
1. Services - sells people’s time (ex. software development, accounting, legal services)
2. Trader - buys and sells products (ex. wholesale, retail)
3. Manufacture - designs products, aggregating components and assembling finished
products (ex. vehicle assembly, construction, engineering, electricity, water, food
and drink, chemicals, media, pharmaceuticals)
4. Raw Materials - grows or extracts raw materials (ex. farming, mining, oil)
5. Infrastructure - sells the utilization of infrastructure (ex. transport, hotels, telecoms,
sports facilities, property management)
6. Financial - receives deposits, lends and invests money (ex. bank, investment house)
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7. Insurance - pools premiums of many to meet claims of a few (ex. insurance)
1. Sole Proprietorship - this business organization has a single owner called the
proprietor who generally is also the manager.
2. Partnership - a partnership is a business owned and operated by two or more
persons who bind themselves to contribute money, property, or industry to a
common fund with the intention of dividing the profits among themselves.
Fundamental Concepts
1. Entity Concept - an organization or a section of an organization stands apart from
other organizations and individuals
2. Periodicity Concept - equal time periods for reporting purposes
3. Stable Monetary Concept - each peso has the same purchasing power at any time
4. Going Concern - financial statements are prepares with the assumption that the
entity will continue in operation for the foreseeable future
The GAAP
The recording of business transactions, the preparation of financial statements, and
the practice of accounting in general are governed by a set of ground rules and procedures.
The set of rules, procedures, assumptions, postulates, and concepts followed in recording
business transactions and events, and in the preparation of general purpose financial
statements is called generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
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Liability - present obligation of the entity to transfer an economic resource as a
result of past events
Equity - the residual interest in the assets of the entity after deducting its liabilities
The accounting equation (or basic accounting equation) offers us a simple way to
understand how these three amounts relate to each other. The accounting equation for a
sole proprietorship is:
Note that the assets are on the left side of the equation opposite the liabilities and
owner’s equity. This equation explains why increases and decreases in assets are recorded
in the opposite manner as liabilities and owner’s equity are recorded. Transactions may
require additions to both sides, subtractions from both sides, or an addition and subtraction
on the same side, but in all cases the equality must be maintained.
Owner’s Equity if broken down is made up of the owner’s capital less his drawings
from the period plus or minus the net income or net loss for the period (income - expenses).
Income and expenses are elements in that are presented in the statement of financial
performance or the income statement. If income is greater than the expenses, the statement
will present a positive amount - the net income for the period.
Assessment
Compute for the missing elements.
Assets Liabilities Equity
Capital Income Expens Net Income
es (Loss)
1 240,000 600,000. 90,000. 75,000. 15,000
855,000.00 00 00 00
2 988,000 541,000. 87,100. 90,000. (2,900)
450,000.0 00 00 00
0
3 25,000.00 11,000 3,000 2,000.00
12,000.00 5,000.00
4 124,300 65,800 50,800. 15,000.00
330,000.00 190,700.0 00
0
5 5,020,000. 1,994,000. 900,000. 589,000 311,000.00
00 00 2,715,000 00
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MODULE 2 THE DOUBLE-ENTRY SYSTEM
Lesson 1. The Account (Averkamp, 2020)
What Is an Account?
To keep a company's financial data organized, accountants developed a system that
sorts transactions into records called accounts. When a company's accounting system is set
up, the accounts most likely to be affected by the company's transactions are identified and
listed out. This list is referred to as the company's chart of accounts. Depending on the size
of a company and the complexity of its business operations, the chart of accounts may list
as few as thirty accounts or as many as thousands. A company has the flexibility of tailoring
its chart of accounts to best meet its needs.
Within the chart of accounts the balance sheet accounts are listed first, followed by
the income statement accounts. In other words, the accounts are organized in the chart of
accounts as follows:
• Assets
• Liabilities
• Owner's (Stockholders') Equity
• Revenues or Income Expenses
Because every business transaction affects at least two accounts, our accounting
system is known as a double-entry system. You can refer to the company's chart of
accounts to select the proper accounts. Accounts may be added to the chart of accounts
when an appropriate account cannot be found.
For example, when a company borrows P1,000 from a bank, the transaction will
affect the company's Cash account and the company's Notes Payable account. When the
company repays the bank loan, the Cash account and the Notes Payable account are also
involved.
If a company buys supplies for cash, its Supplies account and its Cash account will
be affected. If the company buys supplies on credit, the accounts involved are Supplies and
Accounts Payable.
If a company pays the rent for the current month, Rent Expense and Cash are the
two accounts involved.
If a company provides a service and gives the client 30 days in which to pay, the
company's Service Revenues account and Accounts Receivable are affected.
To debit an account means to enter an amount on the left side of the account. To
credit an account means to enter an amount on the right side of an account.
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The normal balance of any account refers to the side of the account - debit or credit -
where increases are recorded.
To decrease an account you do the opposite of what was done to increase the
account. For example, an asset account is increased with a debit. Therefore it is decreased
with a credit.
The abbreviation for debit is dr. and the abbreviation for credit is cr.
Cash (Asset)
Debit Credit
Increases an Decreases an
Asset Asset
Received Cash Paid Cash
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Notes Payable (Liability)
Debit Credit
Decreases a Liability Increases a
Liability Repaid Loan
Borrowed More
On June 1, 2019 a Polo Company borrows P5,000 from its bank. As a result, the
company's asset Cash must be increased by P5,000 and its liability Notes Payable must be
increased by P5,000. To increase the asset Cash the account needs to be debited. To
increase the company's liability Notes Payable this account needs to be credited. After
entering the debits and credits the T-accounts look like this:
Cash (Asset)
Debit Credit
Increases an Decreases an
Asset Asset
Received Cash Paid Cash
June 1
5,000
5,000 June 1
On June 2, 2019 Polo Company repays P2,000 of the bank loan. As a result, the
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company's asset Cash must be decreased by P2,000 and its liability Notes Payable must be
decreased by P2,000. To reduce the asset Cash the account will need to be credited for
P2,000. To decrease the liability Notes Payable that account will need to be debited for
P2,000. The T-accounts now look like this:
Cash (Asset)
Debit Credit
Increases an Decreases an
Asset Asset
Received Cash Paid Cash
June 1 5,000
2,000 June 2
June 2 bal
3,000
5,000 June 1
June 2
2,000
3,000 June 2
bal
Activities (Ballada, 2019)
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a) One
b) Two
c) Three
d) Four
3. Which of the following is true?
a) The debit is on the right side of an asset account.
b) The debit is on the left side of an asset account.
c) The credit is on the left side of a liability account.
d) The debit is on the right side of an expense account.
4. Which of the following accounts has a normal debit balance?
a) Accounts Payable
b) Notes Payable
c) Consulting Revenues
d) Advertising Expense
5. Which of the following accounts is increased by a credit?
a) Accounts Receivable
b) Sales
c) Withdrawals
d) Advertising Expense
6. Which of the following is true?
a) A debit will increase a liability account.
b) A credit will increase an asset account.
c) A credit will increase a revenue account.
d) A debit will decrease an expense account.
7. In applying the rules of debits and credits, which of the following statements is correct?
a) The word "debit" means to increase, and the word "credit" means to decrease.
b) Asset, expense and capital accounts are debited for increases.
c) Liability, revenue and capital accounts are debited for increases.
d) Asset, expense and withdrawals are debited for increases.
8. Which of the following is correct under the double-entry system?
a) Asset amount must be equal to liability amount.
b) The change in asset must be compensated by a change in liability
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c) The change in a debit-side entry must be compensated by a change in credit side
entry
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Required for each transaction: Indicate whether the assets (A), liabilities (L) or owner's
equity (OE) increased (+), decreased (-) or did not change (0) by placing the appropriate
sign in the appropriate column.
Activity 3: The Accounting Equation
The following selected transactions were completed by Victory Delivery Service during July
2019
1. Cash received from delivery services, P92,700.
2. Paid creditors on account. P20,000
3. Received cash from owner as additional investment, P600,000
4. Paid advertising expense, P5,000
5. Billed customers for delivery services on account, P55,200
6. Purchased supplies for cash, P5,000
7. Paid rent for July, P20,000
8. Received cash from customers on account, P25,440
9. Determined that the cost of supplies on hand was P1,440 so P4,560 of supplies
were used during the month
10. Owner withdrew cash for personal use, P20,000
Indicate the effects of each transaction.
A. increase an asset, decrease another asset
B. Increase an asset, increase a liability
C. Increase an asset, increase owner's equity
D. Decrease an asset decrease a liability
E. Decrease an asset decrease owner's equity
Assessment
To increase the balance in the following accounts, would you debit (DR) the account
or would you credit (CR) the account? (Answer with DR or CR only.)
1. Cash dr
2. Land dr
3. Notes Payable cr
4. Accounts Receivable dr
5. Mary Smith, Capital cr
6. Supplies Expense dr
7. Prepaid Insurance dr
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8. Service Revenue cr
9. Mary Smith, Drawing dr
10. Unearned Revenue (Liability) cr
MODULE 3
RECORDING BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS:
JOURNALIZING
Transactions and events are the starting points in the accounting cycle. By relying on
the source documents, transactions and events can be analyzed as to how they will affect
performance and financial position. Source documents identify and describe transactions
and events entering the accounting process. These original written evidences contain
information about the nature and the amounts of the transactions. These are the bases for
the journal entries; some of the more common source documents are sales invoices, cash
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register tapes, official receipts, bank deposit slips, bank statements, checks, purchase
orders, time cards and statements of account.
Each general journal entry lists the date, the account title(s) to be debited and the
corresponding amount(s) followed by the account title(s) to be credited and the
corresponding amount(s). The accounts to be credited are indented. Let's illustrate the
general journal entries for the two transactions that were shown in the T-accounts in the
previous section.
Cash 2,000
With the knowledge of what happens to the Cash account, the journal entry to record
the debits and credits is easier. Let's assume that a company receives P500 on June 3,
2019 from a customer who was given 30 days in which to pay. (In May the company had
recorded the sale and an accounts receivable.) On June 3 the company will debit Cash,
because cash was received. The amount of the debit and the credit is P500. Entering this
information in the general journal format, we have:
All that remains to be entered is the name of the account to be credited. Since this
was the collection of an account receivable, the credit should be Accounts Receivable.
(Because the sale was already recorded in May, you cannot enter Sales again on June 3.) .
On June 4 the company paid P300 to a supplier for merchandise the company
received in May. (In May the company recorded the purchase and the accounts payable.)
On June 4 the company will credit Cash, because cash was paid. The amount of the debit
and credit is P300. Entering them in the general journal format, we have:
June 4, 2019 ??? 300
Cash 300
All that remains to be entered is the name of the account to be debited. Since this
was the payment on an account payable, the debit should be Accounts Payable. (Because
the purchase was already recorded in May, you cannot enter Purchases or Inventory again
on June 4.)
The exceptions to this rule are the accounts Sales Returns, Sales Allowances, and
Sales Discounts—these accounts have debit balances because they are reductions to
sales. Accounts with balances that are the opposite of the normal balance are called contra
accounts; hence contra revenue accounts will have debit balances.
Let's illustrate revenue accounts by assuming your company performed a service and was
immediately paid the full amount of P250 for the service. The debits and credits are
presented in the following general journal format:
Cash 250
Service Revenues 250
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Whenever cash is received, the asset account Cash is debited and another account
will need to be credited. Since the service was performed at the same time as the cash was
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2 received, the revenue account Service Revenues is credited, thus increasing its account
balance.
Let's illustrate how revenues are recorded when a company performs a service on
credit (i.e., the company allows the client to pay for the service at a later date, such as 30
days from the date of the invoice). At the time the service is performed the revenues are
considered to have been earned and they are recorded in the revenue account Service
Revenues with a credit. The other account involved, however, cannot be the asset Cash
since cash was not received. The account to be debited is the asset account Accounts
Receivable.
Assuming the amount of the service performed is P400, the entry in general journal form is:
Accounts Receivable is an asset account and is increased with a debit; Service Revenues is
increased with a credit.
To illustrate an expense let's assume that on June 1 your company paid P800 to the
landlord for the June rent. The debits and credits are shown in the following journal entry:
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Since cash was paid out, the asset account Cash is credited and another account
needs to be debited. Because the rent payment will be used up in the current period (the
month of June) it is considered to be an expense, and Rent Expense is debited. If the
payment was made on June 1 for a future month (for example, July) the debit would go to
the asset account Prepaid Rent.
As a second example of an expense, let's assume that your hourly paid employees
work the last week in the year but will not be paid until the first week of the next year. At the
end of the year, the company makes an entry to record the amount the employees earned
but have not been paid. Assuming the employees earned P1,900 during the last week of the
year, the entry in general journal form is:
As noted earlier, expenses are almost always debited, so we debit Wages Expense,
increasing its account balance. Since your company did not yet pay its employees, the Cash
account is not credited, instead, the credit is recorded in the liability account Wages
Payable.
A credit to a liability account increases its credit balance.
Jackielyn Magpantay organized Eternal Images, a photography and portrait studio, on Oct 1,
2019. The studio completed the following transactions during the month:
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25 Paid the electricity bill for Oct., P3,600.
26 Paid the telephone bill for Oct., P2,100.
28 Received payments from the customers billed on Oct. 17, P7,500.
29 Paid salaries to personnel, P12,000.
30 Received an advance payment from a customer, P1,500.
31 Withdrew P16,000 from the business for a personal emergency.
Required: Prepare the journal entries for the following transactions for October.
Oct 7 No entry.
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Assets increased, Assets decreased. Increases in assets are recorded by debits. Decreases
in assets are recorded by credits.
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Owner’s equity decreased. Assets decreased. Decreases in owner’s equity are recorded by
debits. Decreases in assets are recorded by credits.
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Assessment
Apr. 1 Withdrew P67,000 from a personal savings account and used it to open a new
account in the name of Alabang Plumbing
2 Acquired a service vehicle costing P81,000. A payment of P17,500 in cash was
made and a note payable given for the P63,500 remainder. (compound entry; two
credits)
3 Paid rent for the month, P7,150.
6 Acquired plumbing supplies on account P15,700.
7 Paid for three months of advertising and recorded Prepaid Advertising in the
amount of P6,000.
8 Cash in the amount of P18,350 was received for plumbing services rendered
9 Acquired additional plumbing supplies for cash, P8,050.
11 Paid salaries, P11,600.
15 Rendered plumbing services and billed the customer, P42,200.
16 Paid P5,700 of the amount owed from the transaction of Apr. 6.
19 Paid miscellaneous expenses, P4,300.
20 Collected P21,000 from the customer on the Apr. 15 transaction.
21 Withdrew P14,500 from the business.
22 Paid salaries, P14,100.
24 Paid the first installment of the note payable, P3,850.
25 Paid telephone expense, P1,250.
27 Billed the Clement Resort for plumbing services rendered, P14,150.
The following are listed in the company’s chart of accounts: Cash; Accounts
Receivable; Plumbing Supplies; Prepaid Advertising; Service Vehicle; Notes Payable;
Accounts Payable; Omotoy, Capital; Omotoy, Withdrawals; Plumbing Revenues; Salaries
Expense; Rent Expense; Telephone Expense; and Miscellaneous Expense.
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Summary
References
Introduction
After you have learned how to identify transactions that can be accounted for and
make journal entries in the general journal, the next steps in the accounting cycle are
posting the entries to the ledger and creating a trial balance.
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Learning Outcomes
The ledger accumulates all data necessary prior to the preparation of financial
statements. All similar transactions recorded in the journal are grouped together in the
ledger.
The ledger appears basically in the form of capital letter T. the left side of the ledger
provides the data for debit entry, and the right side of it presents information about the credit
entry.
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accounting elements: assets, liabilities, capital, income, and expense accounts. Actually, the
arrangement of the ledger is in accordance with the listing in the chart of accounts.
Posting
Posting means transferring the amounts from the journal to the appropriate accounts
in the ledger. Debits in the journal are posted as debits in the ledger, and credits in the
journal as credits in the ledger (Ballada, 2019).
At the end of an accounting period, the debit or credit balance of each account must
be determined to enable us to come ip with a trial balance.
After posting, the amounts of debit and credit are added. This process is technically
referred to as footing. Footing is the process of adding the debit and the credit money
columns of the ledger and finding their balances.
The footing of accounts ends the posting process. The next step in the accounting
cycle which is the preparation of the trial balance may be started.
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Lesson 2. The Trial Balance (Ballada, 2019)
The fourth step in the accounting cycle is the preparation of the trial balance. Trial
balance is the listing of the debit and credit balances of accounts from general ledger. In
other words, it is the aggregate of all the debits and credits at the end of the accounting
period. A trial balance is, therefore, an informal accounting schedule that lists accounts
appearing in the ledger with corresponding amounts.
The term “trial balance itself suggests that this statement proves the fundamental
concept that debit should be equal to credit in all instances.
Activities
Refer to the Module 3 activity. Post the entries to the ledger accounts and prepare the trial
balance.
T-accounts:
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Accounts Receivable
Oct-17 22,5 Oct-28
00 7,500
225 7500
00
150
00
Photography Supplies
Oct-12 21,00 Oct-28 7,50
0 0
21000 750
0
Prepaid Rent
Oct-03 40,50 Oct-28 7,50
0 0
40500 750
0
Photography Equipment
Oct-05 129,000 Oct-28 7,500
Oct-10 75000
204000
Office Equipment
28
Oct-08 54,00 Oct- 7,50
0 28 0
54000
Accounts Payable
Oct-19 10,50 Oct-12 21,00
0 0
1050 2100
0 0
1050
0
Magpantay, Capital
Oct-08 54,000 Oct-01 350,000
Oct-05 129,000
479,000
Magpantay, Withdrawals
Oct-31 16,00 Oct-01 350,00
0 0
1600 479,00
0 0
Portraits Revenues
Oct- 54,00 Oct-13 11,40
08 0 0
Oct-17 22,50
0
33,90
0
Salaries Expense
Oct-29 12,000 Oct-30 7,500
12000
29
Telephone, Light and Water Expense
Oct-25 3,60 Oct-30 7,50
0 0
Oct-26 210
0
570
0
Trial Balance:
Eternal Images
Trial Balance
October 2019
Debit Credit
Cash 156,700
524,900.00 524,900.00
Total
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Assessment
Refer to the Module 3 assessment. Post the entries to the ledger accounts and
prepare the trial balance.
Summary
The ledger accumulates all data necessary prior to the preparation of financial
statements. All similar transactions recorded in the journal are grouped together in the
ledger. These entries are then footed and listed in a trial balance to test the balance of total
debits and credits.
Reference
Ballada, W. et.al. (2019). Basic Financial Accounting and Reporting. Sampaloc, Manila,
Philippines. DomDane Publishers.
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