Accouting for organisations with incomplete records Flashcards

1
Q

when will a business be said to have incomplete records?

A

if it does not have a full set of books and ledger accounts

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2
Q

for what reasons will a business ahve incomplete records?

A
  • books or ledgers have been accidentally detroyed
  • small businesses may decide that their businesse income is not big enough to justify a system
  • may be cash based (dont buy or sell on credit)
  • might not have time or resources needed for double entry
  • may be a non-profit organisation
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3
Q

why do accounts need to be produced from incomplete records?

A

as business oweners are required by inland revenue to provide a record of their earnings for tax assessment

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4
Q

what system are businesses with incomplete records likely to use?

A

single entry systems

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5
Q

what is the single entry system?

A

recording all payments, recipts and other transactions in one cash book with no matching enteries in other books

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6
Q

what is the 4-stage method to calculate profit or loss from incomplete records?

A

stage 1: prepare an opening statement of affairs
stage 2: prepare a cash account and/ or bank account
stage3: prepare adjustment accounts
stage 4: prepare final accounts

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7
Q

how do you calculate capital using the accounting equation?

A

capital= assets- liabilities

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8
Q

how can profit be determined with incomplete records?

A

if opening and closing capital are known
the difference between the amounts represents profit or loss for the year

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9
Q

what is a statement of affairs?

A

list of all a firms assets and all the liabilities at a point in time
assets and liabilities are not split into fixed or current

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10
Q

what is the main use of a statement of affairs?

A

can be used by the firm to calculate any missing capital balance for the opening or closing balance then any changes in capital balance must relate to profit or loss

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11
Q

why must you be careful when trying to calculate the profit by examining changes in the capital?

A

possible new capital has been injected into the form over the period concerned
drawings may explain a fall in capital

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12
Q

what adjustments should be made when calcuating profit from capital?

A

subtract any injections in capital- remove effect of extra capital
add any withdrawals of capital- remove effct of redued capital
add back any drawings- to remove the effect of withdrawals on capital

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13
Q

what does the usefullness of a statement of affairs depend on?

A

the accuracy of the information used in their preparation

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14
Q

what can often occur when calculating rofit using opening and closing captal amounts? (Limitation)

A

lapses in memory and mistakes often occur

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15
Q

what can a cashbook summary be used for?

A

find missing figures such as closing bank balance or the total of drawings

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16
Q

what will a cash book summary generally show?

A

opening and closing bank and cash balances
amount of all receipts and payments regardless of whether they relate to capitalor revenue
record of all amounts recieved and paid during the year irrespective of the time periods which they relate

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17
Q

if a firm doesnt have a cash book can a cash book summary still be created?

A

yes from bank statements, paying in slips and cheque counterfoils
however some information may not be available (cah drawings sometimes missing)

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18
Q

what is needed to produce a set of accounts for a business? (incomplete records)

A

totals of cash
total of credit sales and purchases

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19
Q

what can be used to find a total of credit sales and purchases?

A

control accounts

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20
Q

what formula can be used to calculate total credit sales?

A

credit sales for the year= receivables at end of the year + recipts from receivables - receivables at end of year

21
Q

What is the formula for credit purchases?

A

credit purchases for year= payables end of year+ payment to payables-payables at start of year

22
Q

What do you do to expenses from during the year?

A

Add cash payments made during the year

23
Q

What do you do to accruals at the start if the year?

A

Minus

24
Q

What do you do to accruals at the end of the year?

A

Add them

25
Q

What do you do to prepayments at the start of the year?

A

Add them

26
Q

What did you do to prepayments at the end of the year?

A

Minus them

27
Q

What goes on the debit side of an expense account? (Incomplete records)

A

Pre-payment start (bal b/d)
Paid (bank)
Owing bal c/d

Prepayment end bal b/d

28
Q

What goes on the credit side of an expense account? (Incomplete records)

A

Accrual (owing) start bal b/d
IS- purchases
Prepayment c/d

Accrual end bal b/d

29
Q

What is it important to do when preparing final accounts using incomplete records?

A

Adopt a consistent approach

30
Q

What are the steps when preparing final accounts form incomplete records?

A

Identify the missing information
Calculate missing figures using statement of affairs, cash book summary and adjustment accounts
Prepare income statement
Prepare statement of financial position

31
Q

What do mark up and margin relate to?

A

Refer to the relationship between the selling price of output and the cost of that output

32
Q

What does mark-up refer to?

A

Amount of profit added on to the cost of a unit of output in order to set a selling price
Normally added on as a %

33
Q

What is the mark up formula?

A

(Gross profit/ cost)x100

34
Q

What does margin refer to?

A

The amount of profit in the selling price of a unit of output
- normally the % of the selling price that is profit

35
Q

What is the formula for margin?

A

(Gross profit/ selling price)x100

36
Q

When can you use mark-up or margin?

A

If you know the cost of sales figure you could use mark-up or margin to calculate the revenue figure or gross profit

37
Q

What is the sales revenue if cost of sales of £3000 and margin 25%?

A

(3000/75)x100= 4000

38
Q

What would gross profit be if sales revenue of £7000 and markup of 40%?

A

(7000/140)x40= 2000

39
Q

How can you work out purchases using margin or mark-up?

A

If purchases missing you could use mark-up and margin to calculate what the cost of sales figure is then work backwards to workout purchases if you have inventory figures

40
Q

What do cash losses tell us?

A

If cash is missing or has been stolen from the business

41
Q

How do you work out missing cash?

A

You know the start and end balances
What happened throughout the year
Missing figure is the missing amount

42
Q

What ways can you prevent cash loss?

A
  • safe
  • lockbox till
  • purse or wallet
  • regularly bank cash
  • keep a cash book
  • end of day checking till roll
  • keep source documents
  • bank reconciliation statement
  • use cheque transfer (record of transaction)
  • limit those who handle money (who is responsible)
43
Q

What ways can inventory be lost?

A

Damaged
Stolen
Fire
Flood

44
Q

How can you calculate inventory loss?

A

Estimate what you should have had and what you have the difference is what is lost

45
Q

What are the 4 key steps to working out inventory losses?

A

What’s available
What’s used
What should be left
What’s lost

46
Q

How do you calculate what inventory should be available? (Inventory losses, step 1)

A

Opening inventory+ purchases= value of what is available

47
Q

How do you calculate the what’s used stage of inventory losses? (Step 2)

A

Sales-gross profit
Might need to use margin or mark-up

48
Q

How do you calculate what should be left for inventory losses? (Step 3)

A

Value of inventory available (answer to step one)- cost of sales. (Answer to step 2)= estimate of closing inventory

49
Q

How do you calculate what inventory has been lost? (Involves estimate of closing and what you have already)

A

Estimate of closing inventory (step3) - value of remaining inventory = value of inventory lost