Accounting Mid Term Revision Note.
Accounting Mid Term Revision Note.
Accounting Mid Term Revision Note.
Name…………………………… Date……………………………
Class…………………………….
• Accounting: Accounting uses the bookkeeping records to prepare financial statements at regular
intervals.
• Capital or Owner’s Equity is the amount the business owes to its owner. When a business begins
operation, the owner of the business invests capital, which can be any resource such as:
▪ Cash
• Assets are things/resources the business owns or are owed to the business.
• At times a business can borrow money from an entity that is not the owner of the business. The
business now has a liability and is liable to pay for the item borrowed.
• An increase in liabilities results in an increase in assets, for e.g. cash if borrowed increases the
cash in hand, but also increases the amount the business owes to other entities. This is the duality
concept.
• A business can also make a loss wherein the expenses are greater than the income. Loss=
negative profit.
▪ Use ratios and compare the profit of a business to other figures in the financial
▪ Base the business’ future and make decisions based of the profit/loss figure.
which debits to the A/C receiving and the other which credits where the amount is being deducted.
• Ledgers are used to record financial transactions and their format is as follows:
xxx
• Sales, for cash 100 dollars: Dr Cash A/C for 100 (as cash is the receiving A/C) and Cr Sales A/C for 100
• Purchases of goods 150 dollars (on credit): Dr Purchases A/C for 150 and Cr Seller’s A/C for 150.
▪ Crediting the seller’s A/C creates a liability as now the business has obligation to pay
• Drawings (assets taken by the owner of a business for their personal use, out of the business) of goods 50
dollars. Dr Drawings and Cr Purchases, both with 50. The drawings increase and the goods decrease.
• Payment of 150 dollars (through bank) to Seller for goods bought earlier: Credit Bank A/C for 150 and Dr
Seller’s A/C for 150. o Now there is no outstanding balance on the seller’s A/C, as the debit is equal to the
credit.
Revision Note Accounting Chapter 1-6
• When an A/C of a person or another business is maintained, and has a Dr Balance, the business is owed
▪ Sales of 60 dollars to B dawg (on credit): Cr Sales A/C and Dr B Dawg A/C.
▪ An A/C which is a liability to the business due to regular trading is known as a trade
• An A/C which is an asset (because the entity owes money to the business, it’s almost as good as having
the money) due to regular trading is known as a trade debtor/ trade receivables/Debtor.
▪ The debit and credit columns are individually totalled. The difference is noted. If the
debit side is heavier than the credit side, then the difference is entered as a credit
▪ If the balance c/d was Dr, then the balance b/d will be Cr, and vice versa.
▪ The balance c/d entry is done on the last day of the month and the balance b/d entry is made on the first
Business Documents
• Invoice
▪ Contents: The name & address of the supplier & customer, the date. Full
▪ Issued when: Goods on credit are sold by the supplier. Can also be issued
that cash discount is only allowed if the invoice is paid within a time limit.
• Dr note
▪ Contents: Name & address of supplier & customer, date, full details &
▪ Issued when: Goods not satisfactory, Wrong goods etc. Issued by the
supplier or customer
Revision Note Accounting Chapter 1-6
▪ Notes: Customer checks goods & invoice for overcharge/ Wrong goods, etc.
• Cr Note
▪ Contents: Name & address of the supplier & customer, date, full details,
invoice
▪ Uses: Customer records returns outwards & supplier record returns inwards.
• Statement of A/C
▪ Contents: Name & address of supplier & customer, date, balance owing at
the start of the period, invoices & Cr notes issued, payments received, any
customer.
Outstanding & can also be used to check for errors for both.
• Cheque
& for discount allowed. Customer: Makes uses of the cheque counterfoil to
• Receipt
▪ Issued when: Goods sold by cash, and not when by cheque (the cheque acts
as one)
Cash Book
• In practice, it is common to have the cash A/C & bank A/C shown side by side in what is called a cash
book. This book is moved away from the ledger; however, this still follows the double entry system of
bookkeeping. Certain businesses maintain a 3-column cash book where there is an added cash discount
column on the Dr & the Cr side. They are both ledgers as well as prime books of entries
Two Column Cash Book:
Date Details Cash $ Bank $ Date Details Cash $ Bank $
• Contra Entries: withdrawal of cash/deposition of cash. The Cash column can never have a Cr balance as
it is a physical quantity, i.e. it can either be nil or it has a Dr Balance. However, the bank column can have a
Cr balance; this is known as a bank overdraft wherein the bank allows one to pay more than their bank
balance is & then charges interest on the sum (most of the times-in practicality). A Cr balance on the bank
column of the cash book represents a liability.
• Discount allowed/Cash Discount: Discount a business allows to its Cr customers to encourage faster
payment (within a set time span). This is an expense incurred by the business in-order to have debts
settled promptly. However, this is not shown on the receipt.
• The discount columns are not a part of the double-entry system, they are used for convenience. At the end
of the trading periods, their totals are taken are carried to their respective A/C s (Dr Entries for discount
allowed & Cr entries for discount received). This represents the double entry for all the individual debits in
the creditors & credits in the debtors.
• If a cheque is dishonoured (There is a problem with the cheque or there is an insufficient balance in the
debtor’s A/C, etc.), the reverse entry of that has to be made when the cheque was deposited & the debtor
or payee will have to be informed that the amount is unpaid.
• General working of a petty cash system: A junior cashier is given a float amount so that the chief cashier
focuses on more important transactions. They (chief cashier) regularly checks the work of the junior
cashier. When some petty cash is to be obtained, a petty cash voucher is given to the petty cashier. (this
show: purpose, date & signature of receiving person). These are used to check against the petty cash
spent.
• The imprest system: Petty cash expenditure is made from the float/imprest amount. The imprest amount
stays constant (but can be altered). After the balancing of the petty cash book, the chief cashier will restore
the imprest. This enables the chief cashier to know exactly how much petty cash has been spent.
The Ledger
• Ledgers are divided based on the types of accounts they contain, this is done so that several
people can bookkeep simultaneously, i.e. Work can be distributed (the same applies for books of
prime entries).
• As mentioned, a transaction has one Dr effect and one Cr effect equal in amount, therefore all the total
▪ If the debit side of an A/C has greater value than the credit side, then the difference
Accounts that normally have Dr balances Accounts that normally have Cr balances
(EAD) (CLIP)
Assets Liabilities
Expenses Incomes
Drawings Capital
Purchases Sales
Details Dr $ Cr $
Sales xxx
Purchase xxx
Capital xxx
Drawings xxx
xxx xxx
useful in preparing financial statements. If the Dr & Cr columns totals tally, then the ledgers are
arithmetically correct.
Error of commission Correct amount, correct side, but wrong A/C of correct class
Error of complete reversal Correct amount, correct A/C, but wrong side of each A/C
Error of Principle Correct amount, correct side, but wrong class of A/C
• To locate errors:
▪ Check that ledger A/C balance is entered on the correct side (Dr or Cr)
▪ Check that every ledger A/C balance is entered in the trial balance
▪ Look for a transaction equal to the difference in the totals of the TB & check for its
double entry.
▪ Look for a transaction that is equal to half the difference & then check whether it has
▪ Check the double entry for each transaction after the previous trial balance was
been entered without a zero (e.g. If 99 has been entered as debit instead of 990, the difference 891 can be
divided by 9 perfectly giving 99. Thus, any transactions with the value 99 can be located and rectified)