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Accruals Accounting: A Brief Guide To

Accruals accounting records income and expenses when they are incurred rather than when cash is received or paid. It provides a more complete picture of a company's financial position over time. Key concepts include accrued expenses, debtors, creditors, depreciation, prepayments, and provisions. Accruals accounting is now the worldwide standard and is necessary to properly measure performance, make comparisons over time, and determine if a company is financially viable in the long run. Cash accounting by comparison does not provide enough information about assets, liabilities, and the true costs of doing business.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
122 views4 pages

Accruals Accounting: A Brief Guide To

Accruals accounting records income and expenses when they are incurred rather than when cash is received or paid. It provides a more complete picture of a company's financial position over time. Key concepts include accrued expenses, debtors, creditors, depreciation, prepayments, and provisions. Accruals accounting is now the worldwide standard and is necessary to properly measure performance, make comparisons over time, and determine if a company is financially viable in the long run. Cash accounting by comparison does not provide enough information about assets, liabilities, and the true costs of doing business.

Uploaded by

srihari44188
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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A Brief Guide to.

Accruals Accounting

November 2005 DRAFT v.1.0

v. 1.0 - November 2005

Document: briefguide_accruals.doc

Accruals Accounting Accruals Accounting is about ensuring that all income and charges relating to a financial period are actually recorded as being part of that period and that assets and liabilities are appropriately disclosed. This means amounts are recognised when they are incurred, or when the right to receive them arrives regardless of the actual date of any cash receipt or payment. It also requires that non-cash transactions and events are recognised in the accounts to give the complete picture this includes concepts such as depreciation and provisions - as covered in the table opposite. Cash Accounting - An Alternative? In terms of conveying a true and fair view, there isnt really any alternative to accruals accounting. Worldwide accounting standards are clear in that accruals accounting is part of the bedrock of accounting An entity shall prepare its financial statements, except for cash flow information, using the accrual basis of accounting.
International Accounting Standards, IAS1 s.25 & Financial Reporting Standards, FRS 18 s.26

The old approach of Cash Accounting shows just cash receipts and cash payments when they occur. There are no adjustments made to reflect amounts owed or owing or the ownership and use of assets. Whilst this has simplicity to offer, it does not provide the complete picture and is only appropriate today for the very smallest of organisations typically very small-scale voluntary groups with low levels of stakeholder interest. The Cash Flow Statement With Accruals Accounting comes the need for a Cash Flow Statement which takes equal importance alongside the income statement and balance sheet in the accounts. This is necessary because a focus on cash remains an important measure of business health and operation.

A brief guide to. Accruals Accounting

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v. 1.0 - November 2005

Document: briefguide_accruals.doc

To achieve this, the Cash Flow Statement follows a standard format to show cash flows during the period analysing them between operating, investing and financing activities and providing a reconciliation of the change in cash balances during the period to the difference between income and expenditure in the income statement. Fundamental Concepts Accruals Accounting brings with it the need to consider and include;
Accrued Expenses Anticipation of future payment requests whereby you have received goods or services but have not yet been charged for them. These show as the type of expense they are (e.g. Electricity) on the Income Statement and as an Accrued Expense Liability on the Balance Sheet. A Balance Sheet liability showing amounts you owe for goods and services received that have been invoiced, but not yet paid.

Creditors Debtors

A Balance Sheet asset showing amounts owed to you for goods and services delivered but not yet been paid for. Depreciation Assets dont last forever. Depreciation is a prudent estimate of the cost of tangible fixed assets that you have used in the period a valid (but non-cash) expense charged to the Income Statement and a reduction in asset value in the Balance Sheet. Prepayments An asset in the Balance Sheet recognising that you have paid for something that relates to the next accounting period (and therefore is not shown in the Income Statement). For example, if an annual software licence is paid in January for the calendar year, there would be a prepayment in the March 31st Balance Sheet for 9 months worth of the total cost and the Income Statement would only show the 3 month true cost for the period. Provisions Typically relating to bad debts It is prudent to assume not all debts owed will be collected and a Provision for Bad Debts charge to the Income Statement may be appropriate to present a true and fair view with a corresponding liability balance on the Balance Sheet. There is also the possibility of a contingent asset or liability where at the Balance Sheet date, a potential asset or liability exists but materialization of such is out of Managements control for example, the outcome of legal action where, on the balance of probability Management may need to pay a damage settlement would call for a contingent liability on the Balance Sheet.

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Document: briefguide_accruals.doc

Accepted reasons behind Accruals Accounting


Gives the complete true and fair picture with all income and costs related to a period being put to that period & all assets and liabilities recognised. Performance easier to measure with revenues earned compared to resources consumed in a period rather than simply cash in and cash out. Improves comparability from one period to the next. Enables long-term financial management and decision making. Makes clear the true cost of goods / services provided. Forces full records of assets & liabilities improving management of them and showing the cost of using up assets and planning for their replacement. Reveals if current activities are funded by running down net worth. Recognises cost of future payments e.g. pension commitments. Reduces potential for manipulation of accounts.

Cash vs. Accruals Accounting A Simple Example


Imagine youve built and sold a house during the year. It cost you 10,000 to build and youve done all the hard work to get a legally agreed sale for 30,000 which at the accounting period end remains due but unpaid. On a cash accounting basis, your Income Statement would say youve lost 10,000 over the period. On an accruals basis, your Income Statement would say youve made 20,000. A fundamental and worrying difference! Which is the true and fair view??

Still unconvinced?
Try and answer these questions with cash accounting;

You had a 10,000 budget for the year. Have you kept within it? How much does the organisation owe? What are its main assets and how much value is left in them? Is the organisation a viable going concern to survive in the future?

The simple answer is that, with cash accounting you cant. This should be a grave concern and warning to all those interested in organisations that still use cash accounting instead of accruals accounting.

Document Prepared By: St Helena Government Audit Department

chief.auditor@sainthelena.gov.sh (00 290) 2111

A brief guide to. Accruals Accounting

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