Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA FR Exams › Under Provision
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- January 4, 2016 at 4:29 pm #293428
Hello, is under-provision an asset or expenses? Why? Also, what will be the treatment (p&l or financial position) Please can you give a brief illustration? Thank you.
January 4, 2016 at 4:51 pm #293431An “under-provision” is a state of affairs. It’s neither an asset, an expense, an income nor a liability. It’s what you have discovered to be the situation. It’s a result of what you have done …. you have under-provided
When you made the provision (first year, so no brought forward position to worry about) you debited the expense to profit or loss and you credited the liability that appears on the statement of financial position. Let’s say that you provided $100
Subsequently you discover that the provision should have been $125 so you have an under-provision of $25.
But that $25 is neither asset nor liability, neither income nor expense. It’s a state of affairs
Dare I guess that you’ve discovered the expression in the context of a balance on a trial balance and the question says that the balance in the current tax account represents an under / over provision of last year’s tax liability?
October 6, 2023 at 2:39 am #692870Yes i read it from there….then how to know its under or over?
October 8, 2023 at 8:11 pm #692932It all depends on what is showing on the T-account in the trial balance. If it is a credit balance then it will be an over-provision from the previous year and thus reduces the tax expense this year. If it is a debit balance then it will be an under-provision and thus increases the tax expense this year.
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