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INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL

ACCOUNTING 1
KHOA KẾ TOÁN – KIỂM TOÁN

3 Adjusting The Accounts

Learning Objectives
Explain the accrual basis of accounting and the
1 reasons for adjusting entries.

2 Prepare adjusting entries for deferrals.

3 Prepare adjusting entries for accruals.

Describe the nature and purpose of an adjusted


4 trial balance.
3-2
LEARNING Explain the accrual basis of accounting
1
OBJECTIVE and the reasons for adjusting entries.

Accountants divide the economic life of a business into


artificial time periods (Time Period Assumption).

.....
Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. Dec.

Generally a
Alternative Terminology
◆ month, The time period assumption
is also called the
◆ quarter, or periodicity assumption.
◆ year.

3-3 LO 1

Fiscal and Calendar Years

◆ Monthly and quarterly time periods are called interim


periods.

◆ Most large companies must prepare both quarterly


and annual financial statements.

◆ Fiscal Year = Accounting time period that is one year


in length.

◆ Calendar Year = January 1 to December 31.

LO 1
Fiscal and Calendar Years

Question
The time period assumption states that:

a. revenue should be recognized in the accounting


period in which it is earned.

b. expenses should be matched with revenues.

c. the economic life of a business can be divided into


artificial time periods.

d. the fiscal year should correspond with the calendar


year.

LO 1

Accrual- versus Cash-Basis Accounting

Accrual-Basis Accounting
◆ Transactions recorded in the periods in which the
events occur.

◆ Companies recognize revenues when they perform


services (rather than when they receive cash).

◆ Expenses are recognized when incurred (rather than


when paid).

◆ In accordance with generally accepted accounting


principles (GAAP).

LO 1
Accrual- versus Cash-Basis Accounting

Cash-Basis Accounting
◆ Revenues recognized when cash is received.

◆ Expenses recognized when cash is paid.

◆ Cash-basis accounting is not in accordance with


generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).

LO 1

Recognizing Revenues and Expenses

REVENUE RECOGNITION PRINCIPLE


Recognize revenue in the
accounting period in which the
performance obligation is
satisfied.

LO 1
Recognizing Revenues and Expenses

EXPENSE RECOGNITION PRINCIPLE


Match expenses with revenues
in the period when the company
makes efforts that generate
those revenues.

“Let the expenses


follow the revenues.”

LO 1

Illustration 3-1
GAAP relationships in
revenue and expense
recognition

3-10 LO 1
Recognizing Revenues and Expenses

Question
One of the following statements about the accrual basis of
accounting is false? That statement is:
a. Events that change a company’s financial statements are
recorded in the periods in which the events occur.
b. Revenue is recognized in the period in which the performance
obligation is satisfied.
c. The accrual basis of accounting is in accord with generally
accepted accounting principles.
d. Revenue is recorded only when cash is received, and
expenses are recorded only when cash is paid.
LO 1

LO 1
The Need for Adjusting Entries

Adjusting Entries
◆ Ensure that the revenue recognition and expense
recognition principles are followed.

◆ Necessary because the trial balance may not contain


up-to-date and complete data.

◆ Required every time a company prepares financial


statements.

◆ Will include one income statement account and one


balance sheet account.

LO 1

The Need for Adjusting Entries

Question
Adjusting entries are made to ensure that:
a. expenses are recognized in the period in which
they are incurred.
b. revenues are recorded in the period in which
services are performed.
c. balance sheet and income statement accounts
have correct balances at the end of an accounting
period.
d. all of the above.

LO 1
Types of Adjusting Entries
Illustration 3-2
Categories of adjusting entries

Deferrals Accruals

1. Prepaid Expenses. 1. Accrued Revenues.


Expenses paid in cash before Revenues for services
they are used or consumed. performed but not yet
received in cash or recorded.

2. Unearned Revenues. 2. Accrued Expenses.


Cash received before services Expenses incurred but not yet
are performed. paid in cash or recorded.

LO 1

Types of Adjusting Entries

Trial Balance – Each account is analyzed to determine


whether it is complete and up-to-date.
Illustration 3-3

LO 1
DO IT! 1 Timing Concepts

A list of concepts is provided in the left column below, with a description of the
concept in the right column below. There are more descriptions provided than
concepts. Match the description of the concept to the concept.

1. ___ Accrual-basis accounting. (a) Monthly and quarterly time periods.


(b) Efforts (expenses) should be matched
2. ___ Calendar year.
with results (revenues).
3. ___ Time period assumption. (c) Accountants divide the economic life of
4. ___ Expense recognition a business into artificial time periods.
principle. (d) Companies record revenues when they
receive cash and record expenses
when they pay out cash.
(e) An accounting time period that starts on
January 1 and ends on December 31.
(f) Companies record transactions in the
period in which the events occur.
3-17 LO 1

LEARNING
OBJECTIVE
2 Prepare adjusting entries for deferrals.

Deferrals are expenses or revenues that are recognized


at a date later than the point when cash was originally
exchanged. There are two types:

◆ Prepaid expenses

◆ Unearned revenues

3-18 LO 2
Prepaid Expenses

Payment of cash, that is recorded as an asset to show the


service or benefit the company will receive in the future.

Cash Payment BEFORE Expense Recorded

Prepayments often occur in regard to:


◆ insurance ◆ rent
◆ supplies ◆ equipment
◆ advertising ◆ buildings

LO 2

Prepaid Expenses

◆ Expire either with the passage of time or through use.

◆ Adjusting entry:
► Increase (debit) to an expense account and

► Decrease (credit) to an asset account.

Illustration 3-4

LO 2
Supplies

Illustration: Pioneer Advertising


purchased supplies costing $2,500 on
October 5. Pioneer recorded the payment
by increasing (debiting) the asset
Supplies. This account shows a balance
of $2,500 in the October 31 trial balance.
An inventory count at the close of
business on October 31 reveals that
$1,000 of supplies are still on hand.

Oct. 31 Supplies Expense 1,500


Supplies 1,500

LO 2

Supplies
Illustration 3-5

LO 2
Insurance

Illustration: On October 4, Pioneer


Advertising paid $600 for a one-year fire
insurance policy. Coverage began on October
1. Pioneer recorded the payment by
increasing (debiting) Prepaid Insurance. This
account shows a balance of $600 in the
October 31 trial balance. Insurance of $50
($600 ÷ 12) expires each month.

Oct. 31 Insurance Expense 50


Prepaid Insurance 50

LO 2

Insurance
Illustration 3-6

3-24 LO 2
Depreciation

◆ Buildings, equipment, and motor vehicles


(assets that provide service for many years) are
recorded as assets, rather than an expense, on
the date acquired.

◆ Depreciation is the process of allocating the cost


of an asset to expense over its useful life.

◆ Depreciation does not attempt to report the actual


change in the value of the asset.

► Allocation concept, not a valuation concept.

LO 2

Depreciation

Illustration: For Pioneer Advertising, assume


that depreciation on the equipment is $480 a
year, or $40 per month.

Oct. 31

Depreciation expense 40
Accumulated depreciation 40

Accumulated Depreciation is called


a contra asset account.

LO 2
Illustration 3-7

3-27 LO 2

Depreciation

STATEMENT PRESENTATION
◆ Accumulated Depreciation is a contra asset account
(credit).
◆ Offsets related asset account on the balance sheet.
◆ Book value is the difference between the cost of any
depreciable asset and its accumulated depreciation.
Illustration 3-8

LO 2
Prepaid Expenses

Summary of the accounting for prepaid expenses.

Illustration 3-9
Accounting for prepaid expenses

LO 2

Unearned Revenues

Receipt of cash that is recorded as a liability because the


service has not been performed.

Cash Receipt BEFORE Revenue Recorded

Unearned revenues often occur in regard to:

◆ Rent ◆ Magazine subscriptions


◆ Airline tickets ◆ Customer deposits

LO 2
Unearned Revenues

◆ Adjusting entry is made to record the revenue for


services performed during the period and to show the
liability that remains at the end of the period.

◆ Results in a decrease (debit) to a liability account


and an increase (credit) to a revenue account.
Illustration 3-10

LO 2

Unearned Revenues

Illustration: Pioneer Advertising received


$1,200 on October 2 from R. Knox for
advertising services expected to be
completed by December 31. Unearned
Service Revenue shows a balance of $1,200
in the October 31 trial balance. Analysis
reveals that the company performed $400 of
services in October.

Oct. 31 Unearned Service Revenue 400


Service Revenue 400

3-32 LO 2
Unearned Revenues
Illustration 3-11

LO 2

Unearned Revenues

Summary of the accounting for unearned revenues.


Illustration 3-12

3-34 LO 2
LO 2

DO IT! 2 Adjusting Entries for Deferrals

The ledger of Hammond Company, on March 31, 2017, includes these


selected accounts before adjusting entries are prepared.
Debit Credit
Prepaid Insurance $ 3,600
Supplies 2,800
Equipment 25,000
Accumulated Depreciation—Equipment $5,000
Unearned Service Revenue 9,200
An analysis of the accounts shows the following.
1. Insurance expires at the rate of $100 per month.
2. Supplies on hand total $800.
3. The equipment depreciates $200 a month.
4. During March, services were performed for one-half of the unearned
service revenue.
Prepare the adjusting entries for the month of March.

3-36 LO 2
LEARNING
OBJECTIVE
3 Prepare adjusting entries for accruals.

Accruals are made to record

◆ Revenues for services performed but not yet


recorded at the statement date.

◆ Expenses incurred but not yet paid or recorded at


the statement date.

3-37 LO 3

Accrued Revenues

Revenues for services performed but not yet received in


cash or recorded.

Revenue Recorded BEFORE Cash Receipt

Accrued revenues often occur in regard to:


◆ Rent
◆ Interest
◆ Services

LO 3
Accrued Revenues

◆ Adjusting entry shows the receivable that exists and


records the revenues for services performed.

◆ Adjusting entry:
► Increases (debits) an asset account and
► Increases (credits) a revenue account.
Illustration 3-13

LO 3

Accrued Revenues

Illustration: In October Pioneer Advertising


performed services worth $200 that were not
billed to clients on or before October 31.

Oct. 31

Accounts Receivable 200


Service Revenue 200

On November 10, Pioneer receives cash of $200 for the services


performed.

Nov. 10 Cash 200


Accounts Receivable 200
LO 3
Accrued Revenues
Illustration 3-14

3-41 LO 3

Accrued Revenues

Summary of the accounting for accrued revenues.


Illustration 3-15

LO 3
Accrued Expenses

Expenses incurred but not yet paid in cash or recorded.

Expense Recorded BEFORE Cash Payment

Accrued expenses often occur in regard to:


◆ Rent ◆ Taxes
◆ Interest ◆ Salaries

LO 3

Accrued Expenses

◆ Adjusting entry records the obligation and recognizes


the expense.

◆ Adjusting entry:
► Increase (debit) an expense account and
► Increase (credit) a liability account.
Illustration 3-16

LO 3
Accrued Expenses

ACCRUED INTEREST
Illustration: Pioneer Advertising signed a three-month note
payable in the amount of $5,000 on October 1. The note requires
Pioneer to pay interest at an annual rate of 12%.
Illustration 3-17

Oct. 31 Interest expense 50


Interest payable 50

LO 3

Accrued Expenses
Illustration 3-18

LO 3
Accrued Expenses

ACCRUED INTEREST
Illustration: Pioneer Advertising paid salaries and wages on
October 26; the next payment of salaries will not occur until
November 9. The employees receive total salaries of $2,000 for a
five-day work week, or $400 per day.
Illustration 3-19

LO 3

Accrued Expenses
Illustration 3-20

LO 3
Accrued Expenses

Summary of the accounting for accrued expenses.


Illustration 3-21

LO 3

LO 3
Summary of Basic Relationships
Illustration 3-22

LO 3

DO IT! 3 Adjusting Entries for Accruals

Micro Computer Services began operations on August 1, 2017. At the


end of August 2017, management prepares monthly financial
statements. The following information relates to August.
1. At August 31, the company owed its employees $800 in
salaries and wages that will be paid on September 1.
2. On August 1, the company borrowed $30,000 from a local bank
on a 15-year mortgage. The annual interest rate is 10%.
3. Revenue for services performed but unrecorded for August
totaled $1,100.
Prepare the adjusting entries needed at August 31, 2017.

3-52 LO 3
LEARNING Describe the nature and purpose of an
4
OBJECTIVE adjusted trial balance.

Adjusted Trial Balance


◆ Prepared after all adjusting entries are journalized and
posted.

◆ Purpose is to prove the equality of debit balances and


credit balances in the ledger.

◆ Is the primary basis for the preparation of financial


statements.

3-53 LO 4

Illustration 3-25

3-54 LO 4
Adjusted Trial Balance

Question
Which of the following statements is incorrect concerning the adjusted
trial balance?
a. An adjusted trial balance proves the equality of the total debit
balances and the total credit balances in the ledger after all
adjustments are made.
b. The adjusted trial balance provides the primary basis for the
preparation of financial statements.
c. The adjusted trial balance lists the account balances segregated
by assets and liabilities.
d. The adjusted trial balance is prepared after the adjusting entries
have been journalized and posted.

LO 4

Preparing Financial Statements

Financial Statements are prepared directly from the


Adjusted Trial Balance.

Owner’s
Income Balance
Equity
Statement Sheet
Statement

LO 4
Illustration 3-26
Preparation of the income statement and owner’s
equity statement from the adjusted trial balance
3-57

Illustration 3-27
Preparation of the balance sheet from
the adjusted trial balance

3-58 LO 4
DO IT! 4 Trial Balance

(a) Determine the net income for the quarter April 1 to June 30.
(b) Determine the total assets and total liabilities at June 30, 2017, for Skolnick Co.
3-59
(c) Determine the amount of owner’s capital at June 30, 2017. LO 4

DO IT! 4 Trial Balance

3-60 LO 4
DO IT! 4 Trial Balance

3-61 LO 4

DO IT! 4 Trial Balance

3-62 LO 4
LEARNING APPENDIX 3A: Prepare adjusting entries
5
OBJECTIVE for the alternative treatment of deferrals.

Alternate Treatment for Adjusting Entries


1. When a company prepays an expense, it debits that
amount to an expense account.

2. When it receives payment for future services, it


credits the amount to a revenue account.

3-63 LO 5

Prepaid Expenses

Company may choose to debit (increase) an expense account


rather than an asset account. This alternative treatment is simply
more convenient.
Illustration 3A-2

LO 5
Unearned Revenues

Company may credit (increase) a revenue account when they


receive cash for future services.
Illustration 3A-5

LO 5

Summary of Additional Adjustments


Relationships
Illustration 3A-7

LO 5
LEARNING APPENDIX 3B: Discuss financial reporting
6
OBJECTIVE concepts.

Qualities of Useful Information


Two fundamental qualities, relevance and faithful representation.

Relevance

◆ Make a difference in a business decision.

◆ Provides information that has predictive value and


confirmatory value.

◆ Materiality is a company-specific aspect of relevance.

► An item is material when its size makes it likely to influence


the decision of an investor or creditor.

3-67 LO 6

Qualities of Useful Information

Two fundamental qualities, relevance and faithful representation.

Faithful Representation

◆ Information accurately depicts what really happened.

◆ Information must be

► complete (nothing important has been omitted),

► neutral (is not biased toward one position or another), and

► free from error.

LO 6
Qualities of Useful Information

ENHANCING QUALITIES

Comparability Information is Information has the


results when different verifiable if quality of
companies use the independent understandability
same accounting observers, using the if it is presented in a
principles. same methods, obtain clear and concise
similar results. fashion.

Consistency means
that a company uses For accounting information
the same accounting to have relevance, it must
principles and methods be timely.
from year to year.

LO 6

Assumptions in Financial Reporting


Illustration 3B-2

Monetary Unit Economic Entity


Requires that only those things States that every economic
that can be expressed in entity can be separately
money are included in the identified and accounted for.
accounting records.

LO 6
Assumptions in Financial Reporting
Illustration 3B-2

Time Period Going Concern


States that the life of a The business will remain in
business can be divided into operation for the
artificial time periods. foreseeable future.

LO 6

Principles of Financial Reporting

MEASUREMENT PRINCIPLES

Historical Cost Fair Value


Or cost principle, Indicates that
dictates that assets and
companies record liabilities should be
assets at their reported at fair
cost. value (the price
received to sell an
asset or settle
a liability).

LO 6
Principles of Financial Reporting

Revenue Expense
Full Disclosure
Recognition Recognition
Principle
Principle Principle
Requires that Dictates that Requires that
companies efforts (expenses) companies disclose
recognize revenue be matched with all circumstances
in the accounting results (revenues). and events that
period in which the Thus, expenses would make a
performance follow revenues. difference to
obligation is financial statement
satisfied. users.

LO 6

Cost Constraint

Cost Constraint
Accounting standard-setters weigh
the cost that companies will incur to
provide the information against the
benefit that financial statement
users will gain from having the
information available.

LO 6
A Look at IFRS

LEARNING Compare the procedures for adjusting


7
OBJECTIVE entries under GAAP and IFRS.

Key Points
Similarities
◆ Companies applying IFRS also use accrual-basis accounting to
ensure that they record transactions that change a company’s
financial statements in the period in which events occur.
◆ Similar to GAAP, cash-basis accounting is not in accordance with
IFRS.
◆ IFRS also divides the economic life of companies into artificial time
periods. Under both GAAP and IFRS, this is referred to as the time
period assumption.
3-75 LO 7

A Look at IFRS

Key Points
Similarities
◆ The general revenue recognition principle required by GAAP that is
used in this textbook is similar to that used under IFRS.
◆ Revenue recognition fraud is a major issue in U.S. financial
reporting. The same situation occurs in other countries, as
evidenced by revenue recognition breakdowns at Dutch software
company Baan NV, Japanese electronics giant NEC, and Dutch
grocer Ahold NV.

3-76 LO 7
A Look at IFRS

Key Points
Differences
◆ Under IFRS, revaluation (using fair value) of items such as land and
buildings is permitted. IFRS allows depreciation based on
revaluation of assets, which is not permitted under GAAP.
◆ The terminology used for revenues and gains, and expenses and
losses, differs somewhat between IFRS and GAAP. For example,
income includes both revenues, which arise during the normal
course of operating activities, and gains, which arise from activities
outside of the normal sales of goods and services. The term income
is not used this way under GAAP. Instead, under GAAP income
refers to the net difference between revenues and expenses.

3-77 LO 7

A Look at IFRS

Key Points
Differences
◆ Under IFRS, expenses include both those costs incurred in the
normal course of operations as well as losses that are not part of
normal operations. This is in contrast to GAAP, which defines each
separately.

3-78 LO 7
A Look at IFRS

Looking into the Future


The IASB and FASB are completing a joint project on revenue
recognition. The purpose of this project is to develop comprehensive
guidance on when to recognize revenue. It is hoped that this approach
will lead to more consistent accounting in this area. For more on this
topic, see www.fasb.org/project/revenue_recognition.shtml.

3-79 LO 7

A Look at IFRS

IFRS Practice
IFRS:
a. uses accrual accounting.
b. uses cash-basis accounting.
c. allows revenue to be recognized when a customer makes an
order.
d. requires that revenue not be recognized until cash is
received.

3-80 LO 7
A Look at IFRS

IFRS Practice
Which of the following statements is false?

a. IFRS employs the periodicity assumption.

b. IFRS employs accrual accounting.

c. IFRS requires that revenues and costs must be capable of


being measured reliably.

d. IFRS uses the cash basis of accounting.

3-81 LO 7

A Look at IFRS

IFRS Practice
As a result of the revenue recognition project being undertaken by
the FASB and IASB:

a. revenue recognition places more emphasis on when the


performance obligation is satisfied.

b. revenue recognition places more emphasis on when revenue


is realized.

c. revenue recognition places more emphasis on when


expenses are incurred.

d. revenue is no longer recorded unless cash has been


received.
3-82 LO 7

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