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Single company accounts

Forums › Ask ACCA Tutor Forums › Ask the Tutor ACCA FR Exams › Single company accounts

  • This topic has 1 reply, 2 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by MikeLittle.
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  • May 12, 2016 at 6:48 am #314699
    Anuja Nair
    Member
    • Topics: 365
    • Replies: 353
    • ☆☆☆☆

    Why are the 2 transactions from different questions treated differently? Why in one transaction it is deducted from the COS whereas in the other transaction we deduct from the Receivables? How do we know when to deduct from COS or Receivables ?

    transaction (i) of June 2013 Question on ATLAS

    Accounting treatment : Deduct sale from revenue
    Deduct from COS
    Add back into inventory at cost

    transaction (i) of December 2011 Question on KEYSTONE

    Accounting treatment: Deduct sale from revenue
    Deduct from receivables
    Add back to inventory at cost

    May 12, 2016 at 7:20 am #314705
    MikeLittle
    Keymaster
    • Topics: 27
    • Replies: 23321
    • ☆☆☆☆☆

    Has it at all struck you that you’re not satisfying double entry?

    The difference in the questions is, I assume, the fact that in the second question the sale value is still in Receivables whereas in the first example the debt had been settled

    Now, this double entry problem …… Inventory is a strange matter. The recording of inventory is not achieved through the normal transaction double entry route.

    We used to say, when I started teaching all those years ago, “Inventory is its own double entry”

    Let me explain …. when we buy goods and put them into inventory, the double entryis Dr PURCHASES (NOT Inventory) Cr Cash

    And when we sell goods from inventory, the double entry is Dr Cash Cr REVENUE (NOT Inventory)

    So accept that inventory is not part of double entry.

    At the end of each year, inventory is physically counted and valued and we arrive at a figure of, say, $16,900. (This physical count is done AFTER the trial balance has been extracted and balanced)

    The value of Opening Inventory is added to the year’s figure for Purchases and then $16,900 is now deducted (credited) from that sub-total to give us Cost of Sales

    But we can’t have a credit without a debit so the $16,900 appears as an asset (a debit) on the statement of financial position

    In the question Atlas, there must be another entry equivalent to the debit entry that we’re putting through Revenue

    “Deduct from COS” and “Add back to inventory” is effectively
    Cr Inventory in SoPorL Dr Inventory on SoFP

    And that’s what has happened in the question Keystone. The debt was still outstanding so we Dr Revenue and Cr Receivables and then …
    Cr Inventory in SoPorL Dr Inventory on SoFP

    Is that better?

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