ACCY111 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Deferral, Income Statement, General Ledger

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9 May 2018
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Chapter 3 (Wk3) - Recording Transactions
1. Identify the nature of, purpose of and evidence for transactions
2. Describe the accounting cycle used to record, classify and summarise transactions, including
the of ledger accounts and the general ledger.
3. Outline the rules of debt and credit used in double entry accounting and how to apply these
rules in analysing transactions
4. Explain the purpose and format of the general journal, record transactions in the general
journal and transfer the information to the general ledger
5. Discuss the purpose of the trial balance and how to prepare one.
Doubly Entry System:
• Each transaction affects at least two accounts and two entries are made.
• For any number of transactions, the accounting equation should balance.
• 5 categories of accounts: assets, liability, owners equity, revenue, expenses.
Types of transactions:
External: An entity may engage in transactions with outside parties that affect its financial
statements. E.g. purchase of equipment, borrowing money, sale of inventory
• Exchange of economic resources and/or obligations.
Internal: Other economic events that do not involve external transactions are recorded because they
effect the internal relationships between the entities assets, liability, and equity. E.g. use of office
supplies.
• Transformation of economic resources
Non-transactional events: Some are not recorded because there has not been an exchange of goods
or services. E.g. changing interest rates, receiving an order from a customer.
Source Documents: E.g. tax invoice, credit statement
• Prepared for every external transaction
• Support entries in accounting records
• Important element in control system
Has 2 purposes:
1. It provides written evidence of a transaction and is used by accountants to support entries in
the accounting records.
2. It is an important part of controlling entities resources.
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Chapter 3 (Wk3) - Recording Transactions
Interim statements/reports are prepared for external users before the end of the annual period. It
shows how something is proceeding before completion.
Recording transactions in the general journal (journalising transactions):
Journal- A 'book' where transactions and related adjustments are initially recorded to show the total
effect of each transaction or adjustment in one location.
• Once analysed, a transaction is recorded first in the general journal.
• Two or more accounts are affected by each transaction.
• The debits must always equal credits.
Advantages:
• General journal is a complete record of all transactions in date order.
• Presented in chronological order.
• Useful for locating and reducing errors as debits and credits are shown together.
Debit on the left, credit on the right
The Ledger Account:
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Document Summary

Doubly entry system: each transaction affects at least two accounts and two entries are made. For any number of transactions, the accounting equation should balance: 5 categories of accounts: assets, liability, owners equity, revenue, expenses. External: an entity may engage in transactions with outside parties that affect its financial statements. E. g. purchase of equipment, borrowing money, sale of inventory: exchange of economic resources and/or obligations. Internal: other economic events that do not involve external transactions are recorded because they effect the internal relationships between the entities assets, liability, and equity. E. g. use of office supplies: transformation of economic resources. Non-transactional events: some are not recorded because there has not been an exchange of goods or services. E. g. changing interest rates, receiving an order from a customer. Source documents: e. g. tax invoice, credit statement: prepared for every external transaction. It provides written evidence of a transaction and is used by accountants to support entries in the accounting records.

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