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TRANSCRIPT
Syllabus
1 The meaning and objects of Book Keeping, Double Entry Book Keeping.
2 Books of Prime Entry and Subsidiary Books: Cash Book, Bank Book, Journal,
Ledger, Purchase and Sale Books, Debit and Credit Notes Register, Writing of
Books, Posting and Closing of Accounts
3 Trading Account, Profit and Loss Account, Income and Expenditure Account
4 Preparation of Balance Sheet for Individuals and Companies and Disclosure
Requirements
5 Cost, Costing and Elements of Cost, Fixed Expenses, Variable Expenses, Break-
Even Point
1 The meaning & objects of Book Keeping
Book Keeping
Book Keeping is involved in the recording of transactions
It is the systematic recording and classification of financial data of an organization in an orderly manner
It is to show correct position regarding each head of income and expenditure as well as assets and liabilities
It is essentially a record-keeping function done to assist in the process of accounting
It is preliminary step of ‘Book of Account’
It is actually a recording function & the analysis is done during accounting
Objectives of Book Keeping
To keep a complete and accurate record of all the financial transactions in a systematic orderly, logical manner.
To ensures that the financial effects of these transactions are reflected in the books of accounts
To ascertain the overall effect of all recorded transactions on the final statement of the company
To measure all financial transactions in monetary value
To record all financial transactions in the books of prime entry in chronological order
To record all financial transactions by classifying them as personal, real and nominal account
To keep all records of financial transactions permanently for future reference
To summarize the cumulative effect of all economic transactions of business for a given period by maintaining permanent record of each business transaction with its evidence and financial effects on accounting variable
Importance and advantages of Book Keeping
It helps to ascertain the profit and loss of the business
It helps to provide financial information and data for the purpose of cost ascertainment.
It helps to provide financial information for planning, budgeting and forecasting.
It helps to know the true and correct financial position of the business at any time
It helps to provide information to ascertain tax liability
It records all financial transactions systematically and chronologically so it is detect frauds and errors
It is helpful to Present the financial information to business owners and other stake holders
“Book Keeping involves journal, ledger, cash book and other subsidiary books, it cannot disclose the results of Business.”
“Accounting is process of identifying, measuring, recording, classifying, summarizing and communicating the financial information to the users.”
Double Entry Book Keeping
Double-entry book keeping (or double-entry accounting) means that every transaction will result in entries in two accounts.
A minimum of one amount will be a debit (entered on the left side of the account) and at least one amount must be a credit (entered on the right side of the account)
Every transaction must have the total of the debits equal to the total of the credits
Example
Let’s assume that a person invests Rs. 100,000 in exchange for 10,000 shares of the common stock of a new corporation.
The corporation will debit the asset account Cash for Rs. 100,000 and will credit the stockholders’ equity account Common Stock for Rs. 100,000.
In the double-entry accounting system, each accounting entry records related pairs of financial transactions for asset, liability, income, expense, or capital accounts
Recording of a debit amount to one or more accounts and an equal credit amount to one or more accounts results in total debits being equal to total credits for all accounts in the general ledger
Accounting entries that debit and credit related accounts typically include the same date and identifying code in both accounts, so that in case of error, each debit and credit can be traced back to a journal and transaction source document, thus preserving an audit trail
2 Books of Prime Entry and Subsidiary Books
Source document
Business transactions are recorded in the books of accounts on the basis of some written evidence called source document.
Common Source documents are Cash Memo, Invoice or Bill, Receipts, Debit Note, Credit Note, Cheque, Pay in slip etc.
Voucher
Documentary evidence in support of the transaction is known as voucher.
Journal
Journal is a book of prime entry in which transactions are copied in order of date from a memorandum or waste book.
Steps of Accounting Cycle
Recording of Transaction
Journal Ledger Trial Balance
Adjustment Entries
Adjusted Trial Balance
Closing Entries Financial Statement
Classification of Books
Book of Prime Entry – Journal
A journal is often referred to as Book of Prime Entry or the book of original entry.
In this book transactions are recorded in their chronological order
The process of recording transaction in a journal is called as ‘Journalisation’
The entry made in this book is called a ‘journal entry’
Functions of Journal
Analytical Function
Each transaction is analyzed into the debit aspect and the credit aspect. This helps to find out how each transaction will financially affect the business
Recording Function
Accountancy is a business language which helps to record the transactions based on the principles. Each such recording entry is supported by a narration, which explain, the transaction in simple language
Historical Function
It contains a chronological record of the transactions for future references
General Journal
This is a book of chronological record of transactions
This book records those transactions which occur so infrequently that they do not warrant the setting up of special journals
Subsidiary Books
Subsidiary Books refers to books meant for specific transactions of similar nature. Subsidiary Books are also known as Special journals or day books. To overcome shortcoming of the use of the journal only as a book of original entry,
the journal is subdivided into specific journals or subsidiary books.
Cash Book
It is a special journal which is used for recording all cash receipts and all cash payments
It is a book of original entry since transactions are recorded for the first time from the source documents
On the debit side, all cash receipts are recorded while on the credit side, all cash payments are recorded
In case of cash transactions, only a single aspect of transactions is recorded in ledger because the other aspect has to be recorded in Cash Book
It is both a journal and a ledger
Type of Cash Book
1. Single Column Cash Book
2. Double Column Cash Book
3. Triple Column Cash Book
Purchase Day Book
The purchase day book records the transactions related to credit purchase
of goods only
It follows that any cash purchase or purchase of things other than goods is not recorded in the purchase day book
Periodically, the totals of Purchase day book are posted to Purchase account in the ledger
Sales Day Book
The sales day book records transaction of credit sale of goods to customers
Sale of other things, even on credit, will not be entered in the sales day book but will be entered in Journal Proper
If goods are sold for cash, it will be entered in cash book
Total of sales day book is periodically posted to sales account in the ledger
Return Inward Book
The transactions relating to goods which are returned by the customers for various reasons, such as not according to sample, or not up to the mark etc contain in this book
Return Outward Book
This book contains the transactions relating to goods that are returned by
us to our creditors e.g. goods broken in transit, not according to the sample etc.
Bills Receivable Book
It is such a book where all bills received are recorded and therefore posted directly to the credit of the respective customer’s account
The total amounts of the bills so received during the period (either at the end of the week or month) is to be posted in one sum to the debit of Bills Receivable A/c.
Bills Payable Book
All the particulars relating to bills accepted are recorded and therefore posted directly to the debit of the respective creditor’s account.
The total amounts of the bills so accepted during the period (either at the end of the week or month) is to be posted in one sum to the credit of Bills Payable Account.
Journal Proper
Journal Proper is a residuary book in which those transactions are recorded which cannot be recorded in any other subsidiary book
The various examples of transactions entered in a Journal Proper are
Opening entry, Closing entries, Transfer entries, Adjusting entries, Rectifying entries & other misc. entries.
Ledger
The Ledger is the main or principal book of accounts in which all the business transactions would ultimately find their place under various accounts in a duly classified form.
After recording the business transaction in the journal or special purpose subsidiary books, the next step is to transfer the entries to the respective accounts in the ledger.
Ledger Accounts
The book which contains accounts is known as the ledger
Finding information pertaining to the financial position of a business emerges only from the accounts
The ledger is also called the Principal Book or Book of Final Entry
All the necessary information relating to any account is available from the ledger
Posting
Posting means transferring the debit and credit items from the Journal to their
respective accounts in the ledger.
Ledger Posting
As and when the transaction takes place, it is recorded in the journal in the form of journal entry. This entry is posted again in the respective ledger accounts under double entry principle from the journal
Posting to Ledger Accounts from Subsidiary Books
There is a ledger account e.g. for purchase book, there is Purchase Account, for sales book there’s Sales A/c, for cash book there will be Cash A/c as well as Bank A/c and so on
Classification of Ledger
Personal Ledger
The ledger where the details of all transactions about the persons who are related to the accounting unit, are recorded
Debtors’ Ledger
The ledger where the details of transactions about the persons to whom goods are sold, cash is received, etc. are recorded
Creditors’ Ledger
The ledger where the details of transactions about the persons from whom are purchase goods on credit, pay to them etc. are recorded
Impersonal Ledger
The ledger where details of all transactions about assets, incomes & expenses etc. are recorded
Cash Book
The Book where all cash & bank transactions are recorded
General Ledger
The ledger where all transactions relating to real accounts, nominal accounts, details of debtors’ ledger and creditors’ ledger are recorded
Nominal Ledger
The ledger where all transactions relating to incomes and expenses are recorded
Private Ledger
The ledger where all transactions relating to assets and liabilities are recorded
Trial Balance
Trial Balance is the list of debit and credit balances taken out from ledger and it also includes the balances of cash and bank taken from the cash book
When posting of all the transactions into the Ledger is completed and accounts are balanced off, then the balance of each account is put on a list called Trial Balance
Functions of Trial Balance
It helps in ascertaining the arithmetical accuracy of ledger accounts
Helps in locating errors
Provides the summary of Ledger A/c’s
Helps in the preparation of Final A/c’s Bank Book
When an individual or a firm deposits any money into a bank or withdraw money by issuing a cheque from a bank, he/it records the transaction in the debit side of the bank columns of the Cash Book for such deposits and credit side of the bank column of the Cash book for such withdrawals
On the other hand, bank also records such transactions in its book i.e. credit such account for deposits and debit such account for any withdrawals.
The Bank issues a book to the account holder after recording such transactions.
The book which is prepared by the bank for accountholder is known as Pass Book.
Purchase Book
Purchases book is destined for recording the purchase of goods on credit only
Cash purchases are not recorded in this book
Entries in the purchases book are made from the invoices received from the suppliers. Posting is done in the supplier’s/ creditors account daily from the purchases book with their respective amounts
At the end of week/month, the total of the purchases book is debited to the purchases account in the ledger
Sale Book
In the Sales Book, only credit sale of goods are recorded
It is prepared on the basis of copies of invoice sent to customers
To post sales book, the accounts of the customers are individually debited with respective amounts at the end of every month
Sales Account is credited with the monthly total of the Sales Book
Cash Sales will be entered in the Cash Book; credit sale of various assets or investments will be recorded in General Journal
Debit and Credit Notes Register
Debit Note
When the goods are returned to the suppliers, an intimation is sent to them through what is known as a debit note
These debit notes serve as vouchers for these entries
It is a statement sent by a businessman to another person, showing the amount debited to the account of the later
It is usually serially numbered and are prepared in the same form as that of the invoice
Credit Note
Customers who return goods should be sent a credit note
It is a statement sent by a business to another person showing the amount credited to the account of the later
Credit notes are serially numbered and are similar in form to the invoices
Credit notes issued to customers are vouchers for the entries appearing in the sales returns book
GST Law has however provided them a legal recognition as a document on which tax incidence can be passed or excess tax can be refunded or credited back. Section 34 of CGST Act, 2017 details out the provisions on debit note and credit note.
Personal Accounts
Debit the receiver and credit the giver
If you purchase goods from Ram on credit, the two accounts involved are Goods (Purchase) Account and Ram’s Account.
Ram is the giver in this transaction, his account will be credited
If cash is paid to Ram, Ram’s Account will be debited since he is the receiver
Real Accounts
Debit what comes in and credit what goes out
For example, where furniture is purchased for cash, furniture account is debited while cash account is credited
Nominal Accounts
Debit all expenses and losses and credit all incomes and gains
For example, if firm/business pays salary to its clerk, the two accounts involved are salary account and cash account
Salary account is a nominal account
Salary paid is an expense of the business and therefore this account will be debited
Similarly if interest is received, interest account will be credited, since interest is an income item
Rules
Assets Accounts: debit increases in assets and credit decreases in assets
Capital Account: credit increases in capital and debit decreases in capital
Liabilities Accounts: credit increases in liabilities and debit decreases in liabilities
Revenues or Incomes Accounts: credit increases in incomes and gains and debit decreases in incomes and gains
Expenses or Losses Accounts: debit increases in expenses and losses and credit decreases in expenses and losses
3 Trading Account, Profit and Loss Account, Income and Expenditure Account
Trading Account
It is the first part of income statement which is prepared to ascertain the gross profit or gross loss for a given accounting period
It is prepared before the preparation of profit & loss account
It shows the result of trading activities relating to purchases & sales of goods & services
It is prepared to calculate separately the profit from sale & purchase transactions only
The profit or loss is termed as gross profit or gross loss as various other expenses of an organization like administrative, selling & distribution and maintenance expenses etc. are not deducted
Only the direct expenses which are incurred to bring goods into saleable condition like freight, insurance, carriage inwards, fuel, power, royalties on production, consumption of stores etc. are taken into account to calculate gross profit/loss
Gross Profit = Net Sales – Cost of the Goods Sold
Gross Loss = Cost of the Goods Sold – Sales
Net Sales = Total Sales – Sales Returns (Return Inwards)
Cost of goods sold = Opening stock of goods + net purchases - closing stock of goods at the end + all direct expenses
Net Purchases = Total Purchases – Purchases Returns (Returns Inwards)
Important points regarding trading account are Stock, Purchases, Direct Expenses like Carriage Inward, Freight and insurance, Wages, Fuel, Power and Lighting Expenses, taxes, Packing Charges, Manufacturing Expenses, Royalties & Sales
Profit & Loss Account
It is prepared to calculate the net profit or loss of the business for a given accounting period
The balance of Trading Account i.e. gross profit or gross loss is transferred to the Profit and Loss Account which is the starting point of the preparation of this account
Thereafter, all those expenses and losses which have not been debited already to the Trading Account are debited to the Profit and Loss Account
Other incomes and gains, if any, are credited to this account, e.g. interest earned or commission received etc.
Net profit increases the capital whereas net loss decreases the capital
Net profit = Total Revenues – Total Expenses
Net Loss = Total Expenses – Total Revenues
Important points in Profit and Loss account are Selling and Distribution Expenses, Management Expenses, Maintenance Expenses, Financial Expenses, Abnormal Losses, Gross Profit, Other Income, Non-trading Income and Abnormal Gains
Trading Account Profit & Loss Account
It is prepared to calculate the gross profit (loss) for a particular period
It is prepared to arrive at the net profit (loss)
In trading account, cost of goods sold, sales and direct expenses are accounted
In profit and loss account, indirect expenses, such as administrative expenses, selling expenses, etc, are charged against the gross profit and other revenues
The result of trading account i.e. gross profit (loss) is transferred to profit and loss
account
The balance in profit and loss account i.e. net profit (loss) is transferred to capital account which will be shown in the balance sheet
Income and Expenditure Account
It is equivalent to the Profit and Loss Account of a business enterprise
It is an account which is widely adopted by non-profit making concerns
It is prepared by following accrual principle
Only items of revenue nature pertaining to the period of account are included therein
It requires adjustment in relevant accounts of outstanding items of income and expenditure as also exclusion of amounts paid in advance before these are included in Income and Expenditure Account.
Non-profit organizations registered under section 25 of the Companies Act, 1956 are required to prepare their Income and Expenditure account and Balance Sheet as per the revised Schedule VI to the Companies Act, 1956
Features
It is a revenue account prepared at the end of the financial period for finding out the surplus or deficit of that period
It is prepared by matching expenses against the revenue of that period concerned
Both cash and non-cash items, such as depreciation, are taken into consideration
All capital expenditures and incomes are excluded
Only current years’ income and expenses are considered
4 Balance Sheet
It is a statement which shows the financial position i.e. the balances of assets, liabilities and capital, of a business entity at a given date
It is prepared from the real accounts and personal accounts of trial balance
A debit balance in a real account or personal account represents an asset
A credit balance in a personal account represents a liability
There can be some newly opened accounts as well on account of adjustment entries
The assets and liabilities are arranged in a proper way and the resultant statement is the balance sheet
On the right hand side, assets are arranged while on the left hand side, liabilities are recorded
The totals of the two sides of the balance sheet must agree because of the equation
Assets = Liabilities + Capital
Features of Balance Sheet
The primary objective of the preparation of balance sheet is to ascertain the
financial position of a concern
It shows (a) the nature and value of assets, (b) the nature and value of liabilities and (c) the position of capital
Balance sheet is always prepared on a certain date, never for a particular period
Balance sheet, unlike a trading and profit and loss account, is not an account
It is a statement containing information regarding assets, liabilities and capital
Balance Sheet has the following sections
Assets: Current assets, Long-term investments, Property, plant and equipment & Other assets
Liabilities: Current liabilities, Noncurrent liabilities, Deferred credits
Stockholders’ Equity: Paid-in capital, Retained earnings, Treasury stock (if any)
Income statement
It is also referred to as the statement of earnings, statement of operations, statement of income, and profit and loss statement
It reports the revenues and expenses occurring during the accounting period
It will report a company’s operating revenues, other revenues (non-operating and gains), operating expenses, other expenses (non-operating and losses)
multiple-step income statements
Sales
Less: Cost of goods sold
Gross profit
Less: Selling, general & admin expenses
Operating profit
Add: Other income
Earnings before tax
Less: Income tax expense
Net earnings
Statement of Cash Flows
The statement of cash flows (or cash flow statement) summarizes how a company’s cash and cash equivalents have changed during the same period of time as the company’s income statement
Cash flows from operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities
Cash flows from financing activities
5 Cost and Elements of Cost & Break-Even Point
Cost
It is a measurement, in monetary terms, of resources used for some purpose
The resources may be tangible (material or machinery) or intangible (wages, power, time spent)
The use of resources is implicit in the term ‘Cost’ and commonly understood ‘Cost’ is expenditure incurred for creation of a value
Costing
It is defined as the technique and process of ascertaining cost
The cost may have to be ascertained for a product or service or a department or any activity carried out by the business
It denotes accumulating all such expenses incurred for producing a product or rendering a service or carrying out business activity
These expenses are mainly in the form of material, labor and other expenses
Element of Cost
Material Cost, Employee Cost, Direct Expenses, Utilities, Repairs & Maintenance Cost, Production Overheads, Administrative Overheads, Selling and Distribution Overheads, Interest and Finance Charges,
Classification of Costs
Based on Nature of Expense - Element
Material Costs are costs of physical commodities used to make a final product. The material could be basic raw material, components, consumables, spares, packing material etc.
Labor Costs comprise of expenses in relation to salaries, wages, bonuses,
expenses on staff welfare, statutory benefits like provident fund, gratuity etc.
Other Expenses are incurred either to provide support to manufacturing or service activity or to ensure smooth running of business.
Based on traceability to cost object
Direct Costs are costs that can be easily identified with the unit of output. The direct costs could be direct material costs, direct labor costs or direct expenses. The Direct Costs (material plus labor plus expenses) together make a Prime Cost.
Indirect Costs are those which are not easily directly connected with the cost unit or cost centre. All indirect costs together are termed as ‘Overheads’.
Based on behavioral of cost
Fixed Costs are those cost which do not change with change in the level of activity within the relevant range (installed capacity). An interesting aspect about fixed costs is that while the total fixed costs remain constant, per unit fixed cost will go on decreasing. If production goes up it is clear that this concept helps management to understand the importance of capacity utilization.
Variable Costs are costs that vary in direct proportion to the level of output. Any increase in the production volume will result in corresponding increase in these costs. Thus total variable costs will increase exactly in the same proportion of the volume of activity. The most common examples of such cost are material costs
and costs of labor directly working on production. An interesting aspect about variable costs is that while total variable cost changes with production level, per unit cost remains the same.
Semi Variable Costs are those which change with change in activity level but not in the same proportion. In practice, the line of demarcation between fixed and variable is so thin that most of the cost items fall under this category.
Break-Even Point
Break-Even Point reveals the quantity or volume of sales at which no profit or no loss is made i.e., total cost is equal to total selling price or where contribution is equal to fixed cost.
If the production is increased beyond this level, there will be profit and vice-versa.
The break-even point may be expressed in two ways:
1) BEP = Fixed Cost / Contribution per unit
2) BEP = Fixed Cost / PV Ratio