Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA FA – FIA FFA › Electricity expense a/c with a Cr op. bal.
- This topic has 3 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by  John Moffat. John Moffat.
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- November 27, 2013 at 1:16 pm #148072Hallo, I am solving an example, which says: During the year, $4,000 was paid to the electricity board. At the beginning of the year, $1,000 was owed, and 
 at the end of the year $1,200 was owed?
 What is the charge for electricity in the year’s income statement?– the Electricity expense a/c has an opening balance of $1000 on the credit side, money owed. Why? 
 Usually the Electricity expense a/c has a debit opening balance, why is that here is a credit? And, usually the Electricity expense a/c is cleared to I/S, so it’s not possible that it’s balance is not 0 at the start of the new period.
 I am wondering if the Electricity Expense a/c as they have named in the solution below is actually Electricity payable a/c, because the payable can have a credit opening balance, but here they say it’s an expense not a payables a/c?This is the T a/c content as given: 
 Electricity expense account
 Cr 1,000 b/d
 Cr 4,200 Income statement charge
 Dr Cash 4,000
 Dr C/d 1,200
 Dr 5,200 Cr 5,200
 Cr 1,200 B/dI would appreciate some idea! 
 Thank you!MP November 28, 2013 at 8:58 am #148200Although I will explain the debits/credits afterwards, I think it is quicker and easier without t-accounts. 
 It is irrelevant how you do your workings – they are not marked – t-accounts only end up wasting time and (sometimes) causing confusion.They paid cash of $4000, 1,000 of this was paying what was owed from last year, so that leaves $3,000 for this year. We will owe an extra 1200 for this year, which gives a total cost of $4,200. With regards to the double entry. Electricity does not normally have an opening debit balance. The reason is will have a credit balance at the start of the year is because 1,000 was owing at the end of last year / start of this year (the accrual). During the year, they pay cash of $4000, so debit electricity $4000. At the end of the year there is an extra $1200 owing, so debit electricity and credit accruals with $1200. This leaves a ‘missing figure’ on the electricity account of $4,200 which is the expense for the year and is transferred to the income statement a/c. November 28, 2013 at 9:56 am #148223Thank you very much for the answer, it’s all clear now. November 28, 2013 at 10:24 am #148234You are welcome 🙂 
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