THE ACCOUNTING EQUATION
A financial information system that involves three basic activities:
Identifying
Identification of the economic events relevant to the business
Selecting the transactions which are financial or economic in nature
Applying the Entity Principle
Personal transactions of the owner is not included
Recording
A long process
Parts:
Preparing the journal entries (Journalizing)
Transferring the entries from the journal to the ledger (Posting)
Grouping assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, and equities (Classifying)
Prepare the Trial Balance (Summarizing)
Communicating
By providing Financial Statements and Reports
Analyzing and interpreting the data from these statements
Income statement shows result of operation for the period
Income statement accounts are just temporary accounts, because at the end of the year, it will go back to zero
Statement of Financial Position shows the financial status or condition
Internal Users
Board of Directors, managers, etc.
People who plan, regulate, and operate the business
External Users
Creditors (suppliers and bankers), Investors, Government regulatory bodies (BIR)
Outside organizations and individuals who want financial information on the country
Basic Accounting Equation
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + OWNER’S EQUITY
Debits → assets
Credits → liabilities and equity
Expenses are debits, revenues are credits
Expanded Accounting Equation
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + OWNER’S CAPITAL - OWNER’S DRAWING + REVENUE - EXPENSES
Transaction 1: Cash Investment by Owner
Increase in cash and increase in owner’s equity
Transaction 2: Purchase of equipment for cash
Decrease in cash and increase in equipment
Transaction 3: Purchase of supplies using credit
Increase in supplies and increase in accounts payable
Transaction 4: Services performed for cash
Increase in cash and increase in service revenue
Transaction 5: Purchase of advertising expense on credit
Increase in accounts payable and decrease in advertising expense
Transaction 6: Services performed for cash and credit
Increase in cash and an increase in accounts receivable and increase in service revenue
Transaction 7: Payment of Expenses
Decrease in Cash and increase in expenses
Transaction 8: Payment of accounts payable
Decrease in cash and decrease in accounts payable
Transaction 9: Receipt of cash on account
Increase in cash and decrease in accounts receivable
Transaction 10: Cash withdrawal by owner
Decrease in assets and decrease in owner’s equity
A financial information system that involves three basic activities:
Identifying
Identification of the economic events relevant to the business
Selecting the transactions which are financial or economic in nature
Applying the Entity Principle
Personal transactions of the owner is not included
Recording
A long process
Parts:
Preparing the journal entries (Journalizing)
Transferring the entries from the journal to the ledger (Posting)
Grouping assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, and equities (Classifying)
Prepare the Trial Balance (Summarizing)
Communicating
By providing Financial Statements and Reports
Analyzing and interpreting the data from these statements
Income statement shows result of operation for the period
Income statement accounts are just temporary accounts, because at the end of the year, it will go back to zero
Statement of Financial Position shows the financial status or condition
Internal Users
Board of Directors, managers, etc.
People who plan, regulate, and operate the business
External Users
Creditors (suppliers and bankers), Investors, Government regulatory bodies (BIR)
Outside organizations and individuals who want financial information on the country
Basic Accounting Equation
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + OWNER’S EQUITY
Debits → assets
Credits → liabilities and equity
Expenses are debits, revenues are credits
Expanded Accounting Equation
ASSETS = LIABILITIES + OWNER’S CAPITAL - OWNER’S DRAWING + REVENUE - EXPENSES
Transaction 1: Cash Investment by Owner
Increase in cash and increase in owner’s equity
Transaction 2: Purchase of equipment for cash
Decrease in cash and increase in equipment
Transaction 3: Purchase of supplies using credit
Increase in supplies and increase in accounts payable
Transaction 4: Services performed for cash
Increase in cash and increase in service revenue
Transaction 5: Purchase of advertising expense on credit
Increase in accounts payable and decrease in advertising expense
Transaction 6: Services performed for cash and credit
Increase in cash and an increase in accounts receivable and increase in service revenue
Transaction 7: Payment of Expenses
Decrease in Cash and increase in expenses
Transaction 8: Payment of accounts payable
Decrease in cash and decrease in accounts payable
Transaction 9: Receipt of cash on account
Increase in cash and decrease in accounts receivable
Transaction 10: Cash withdrawal by owner
Decrease in assets and decrease in owner’s equity