1102AFE Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Jb Hi-Fi, Trial Balance, Financial Statement

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30 May 2018
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Accounting for Decision Making Lecture notes week 3
1. Business Transactions
Occurrences that affect assets, liabilities and equity items
Recorded when they:
o Can be reliably measured in monetary terms (monetary concept)
o Ou at a’s legth (legitiate transaction)
Entity concept
o Every entity must keep records of its business transactions separate from
any personal transactions of the owners
*note: however, that these two separate entities (the owner on the one hand,
and the business on the other) do interact
For example: where the other either:
o Withdraws items (cash, other assets) from the business for personal use,
OR
o Contributes additional funds (cash or assets from their personal funds)
into the business
These are BUSINESS transactions
Examples of business transactions:
Contribution of capital by owners
Payment of salaries
Receipt of bank interest
Purchase of laptop on credit
Payment of accounts payable
Depreciating office equipment
Purchase of accounting software
Payment of advertising
Owner takes cash from the cash register for personal use
Cash purchases
Cash sales
2. Personal transactions and business events
Personal transactions
o Transactions of owners, partners of shareholders that are unrelated to
operation of business
o E.g. owner uses personal funds to buy a laptop for personal use
Business events
o Occurrences that will probably affect the entity in some way, but are not
recorded as business transactions until an exchange of goods occurs
between the entity and an outside party
o E.g. New employee signs a contract of employment today, but starts
work in 2 months. Not a business transaction until new employee works
and gets paid
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Document Summary

Or: contributes additional funds (cash or assets from their personal funds) into the business, these are business transactions. New employee signs a contract of employment today, but starts work in 2 months. Truck = loan: note: it is possible for a business transaction to affect more than 2 accounts. If in the previous example the firm had paid ,000 in cash and borrowed only ,000, the impact on the accounting equation would be: Truck ,000, cash ,000= loan ,000: the balance sheet is based on the accounting equation, every transaction affects the accounting equation in at least 2 ways, accounting equation is a mathematical equation. Different ways to write the accounting equation: a=l +oe, oe=a-l. They represent the two different balance sheet formats found in practice. Accounting equation expanded: p(cid:396)ofit i(cid:374)(cid:272)(cid:396)eases o(cid:449)(cid:374)e(cid:396)"s e(cid:395)uit(cid:455), a(cid:374)d p(cid:396)ofit = (cid:396)e(cid:448)e(cid:374)ue- expenses, therefore, revenue results in an increase in equity, expenses result in decreases in equity.

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