ACCA FA1 FIA Level
ACCA FA1 FIA Level
Notes
FIA FA1
Recording Financial Transactions
i
First edition 2011
©
BPP Learning Media Ltd
2011
ii
chapter 1 chapter 9
BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS AND RECORDING PAYMENTS
DOCUMENTATION page 87
page 1
CONTENTS
chapter 10
chapter 2 MAINTAINING PETTY CASH RECORDS
ASSETS, LIABILITIES AND THE ACCOUNTING page 93
EQUATION
page 13
chapter 11
BANK RECONCILIATIONS
chapter 3 page 99
RECORDING, SUMMARISING AND POSTING
TRANSACTIONS
page 23 chapters 12 - 13
SALES DAY BOOKS AND THE
RECEIVABLES LEDGER
chapter 4 page 109
COMPLETIING LEDGER ACCOUNTS AND
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
page 47 chapters 14 - 15
PURCHASE DAY BOOKS AND THE
PAYABLES LEDGER
chapter 5 page 117
RECEIVING AND CHECKING MONEY
page 59
chapter 16
CONTROL ACCOUNTS
chapter 6 page 125
BANKING MONIES RECEIVED
page 65
chapter 17
RECORDING PAYROLL TRANSACTIONS
chapter 7 page 135
RECORDING MONIES RECEIVED
page 73
Answer bank
chapter 8
AUTHORISING AND MAKING PAYMENTS
page 79
Introduction iii
iv
chapter 1
WHAT IS A BUSINESS? X
BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS X
DISCOUNTS X
SALES TAX X
STORAGE OF INFORMATION X
BUSINESS
TRANSACTIONS
AND
DOCUMENTATION
1
WHAT IS A BUSINESS?
Profit
Businesses make
= income less expenditure
2 2
Context
Businesses exist to make a profit. If things go wrong, and expenses exceed income, then a loss is
made.
There are also non-profit making organisations (such as charities) but these are outside the scope
of your syllabus.
The accounting system records, summarises and presents the information contained in the documentation
generated by the transactions.
4 4
Context
Businesses may make sales and purchases, provide services to customers (eg taxi firm, accounting
services), incur other expenses (eg rent of shop premises) and buy items in order to run the
business (eg computers, shelving, delivery van). These are what we mean by business
transactions.
Every business transaction generates some type of paperwork. These documents are very
important as they provide the initial information which will eventually be recorded in the accounting
records.
Solution 1.1
A discount is a reduction in the price of goods below the amount at which those goods would normally be sold
to other customers of the supplier.
A reduction in the amount of money demanded An optional reduction in the amount of money
from a customer payable by a customer
Usually results from buying goods in bulk Given for immediate or very prompt payment
Given on supplier’s invoice Financing decision
No seperate accounting required Needs to be recorded separately in the books of
account
6 6
Context
Discounts are ways of encouraging customers to buy more goods and to pay for those goods more
quickly.
Solution 1.2
Sales tax
Is an indirect tax levied on the Can have a number
Administered by tax
sale of goods and services of rates, eg standard
authorities
rate, reduced rate
8 8
Context
A business may be registered with the tax authorities for sales tax (eg VAT in the UK, TVA in
France). If so, it must charge sales tax on its sales but can reclaim any sales tax it pays on its
purchases. Therefore it needs to keep records of input and output tax in order to know what it owes
to (or may recover from) the tax authorities.
Solution 1.3
Storage of information
Paperwork must be properly handled to ensure security and availability of information.
A retention policy sets down for how long different kinds of information are retained.
Files of data may be temporary, permanent, active and non-active.
Information no longer needed on a daily basis is electronically scanned for long-term storage, archived or
securely destroyed.
Information stored about individuals is regulated by Data Protection legislation.
10 10
Context
We have already seen, at the beginning of this chapter, how business transactions generate
documents. These documents must be retained, so that any queries arising can be checked to the
original documents.
Solution 1.4
12 12
chapter 2
DOUBLE ENTRY X
ASSETS,
LIABILITIES AND
THE ACCOUNTING
EQUATION
13
14
THE ACCOUNTING EQUATION
Context
The accounting equation states that the assets and liabilities of a business must always be
equal.
Solution 2.1
16
Context
This section introduces terminology that you will meet in your business life.
Basic principles
Double entry bookkeeping is based on the same idea as the accounting equation.
Every accounting transaction has two equal but opposite effects
Equality of assets and liabilities is preserved
Therefore, in a system of double entry bookkeeping, every accounting event must be entered in ledger accounts
both as a debit and as an equal but opposite credit.
Debit Credit
An increase in an expense An increase in income
An increase in an asset An increase in a liability (or capital)
A decrease in a liability (or capital) A decrease in an asset
18
Context
Double entry is the most important topic that you will meet on this course. It forms the basis of
double entry bookkeeping.
Solution 2.2
20
Context
It is very important to understand the differences between capital and revenue expenditure.
If revenue expenditure is wrongly recorded as capital expenditure, it will reduce expenses and so
show a profit that is too high. In reality the business could even have made a loss.
Solution 2.3
Expand notes on assets and liabilities (section 2) and the accounting equation
(section 3).
Work through the extended example on the accounting equation throughout
section 3.
Attempt Quick Quiz
22
chapter 3
OVERVIEW X
CASH BOOK X
ACCOUNTING PROCESSES X
In this chapter you get to grips with the nuts and bolts
of double entry. Once you understand this you will be
able to deal with transactions posting in your
assessment.
RECORDING,
SUMMARISING
AND POSTING
TRANSACTIONS
23
OVERVIEW
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Sales day book Sales invoices, credit notes sent Receivables ledger/control account
Purchase day book Purchase invoices, credit notes Payables ledger/control account
received
Petty cash book Notes and coins paid and General ledger
received
24
Context
The previous chapters have been essential background information. You are now going to see how
the business documents (from chapter 1) are recorded in the financial records using double entry
bookkeeping (from chapter 2). In deciding to which accounts a transaction should be posted, you
will also be using your knowledge about capital and revenue expenditure (from chapter 2).
Solution 3.1
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Most businesses analyse their sales and purchases using additional columns for different product lines, for
example
Sales and purchase returns day books summarise goods returned to/by the business
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Context
The sales day book records all credit invoices sent out by the business and the purchase day book
records all credit invoices received by the business.
Solution 3.2
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Cash book
Money received and paid out is recorded in the cash book, a book of prime entry.
Cash receipts are recorded as follows, with the total column analysed into its
component parts.
CASH RECEIPTS
Discounts Rec’bles Cash
Date Narrative allowed Total ledger sales Sundry
$ $ $ $ $
3.3.X9 Cash sale 150 150
Receivable:
ABC & Co 50 1,000 1,000
(discount taken) __ ____ ____ ___ ___
50
__
__ 1,150
____
____ 1,000
____
____ 150
___
___ ___–
___
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Context
All monies paid into or out of the business bank account are recorded in the cash book. Therefore
the cash book will record cheque and debit/credit card transactions, as well as cash.
However small amounts of cash held on the premises to pay small bills (eg the window cleaner,
stamps) is called petty cash and this is dealt with separately in chapter 10.
Solution 3.3
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
General ledger
Ledger accounting is the process by which a business keeps a record of its transactions:
In chronological order Built up in cumulative totals
The general ledger (or nominal ledger) is an accounting record which summarises the financial affairs of a
business. Accounts within the general ledger include the following.
Plant and machinery (non-current asset) Rent (expense)
Inventories (current asset) Total payables (current liability)
Sales revenue (income)
A ledger account or 'T' account looks like this.
NAME OF ACCOUNT
$ $
DEBIT SIDE CREDIT SIDE
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Context
The general ledger (or nominal ledger) contains all the accounts which will eventually be used to
prepare the financial statements.
Solution 3.4
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Double entry
Remember from Chapter 2:
Every accounting transaction has two equal but opposite effects
Equality of assets and liabilities is preserved
Debit Credit
Increase in expense Increase in income
Increase in asset Increase in liability/capital
Decrease in liability/capital Decrease in asset
The cash book is a good starting point for understanding double entry.
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Context
Double entry bookkeeping ensures that for every debit made, there is an equal credit entry (a
practical example of the accounting equation).
When dealing with cash transactions, it is always useful to start with the cash entry first in order to
decide whether a debit or credit is needed. This will be dealt with in detail over the next pages.
Solution 3.5
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
34
Context
As previously mentioned, the bank account is a good starting point for cash transactions. It is
usually quite straightforward to decide the entry in the cash book. Then if the entry in the cash
book is a debit, the other side must be a credit and vice versa.
Solution 3.6
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
CASH ACCOUNT
$ $
31.1.X1 Receivables 300
36
Context
Once you are used to cash transactions, credit transactions merely add an extra step with an entry
to receivables or payables account.
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
$ $
DEBIT Receivables a/c 1,060
CREDIT Revenue: CDs 580
Revenue: DVDs 480
Other books of prime entry are analysed and posted in a similar way.
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Context
The totals from the day books need to be posted to the ledger accounts. This is achieved by using
double entry.
Solution 3.7
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Control acccounts are part of the double entry system Records of sales and purchases
should not include sales tax
A receivables control account is posted with totals from
the sales day book and the cash book It is recorded separately in the
analysis columns of the day books or
A payables control account is posted with totals from the
cash book and posted to the sales
purchases day book and the cash book
tax account
The control accounts should agree with the total of the
The tax paid to or recovered from
individual balances and act as a check on the recording
the authorities each quarter is the
of transactions
balance on the sales tax account
The control account balances appear in the final accounts
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Context
We looked at the receivables and payables ledgers in Chapter 2. Now we are seeing how the
memorandum ledgers are posted.
Keeping a memorandum ledger is also an important check on the accuracy of the double entry
bookkeeping. The balances on the individual ledger accounts should add up to the total on the
control account. We will look at this in detail in chapter 16.
Solution 3.8
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Computerised accounting
The principles of a computerised system are exactly the same as for manual accounting but the records
or files are held in electronic formats
Computer activity is divided into input, processing and output
Batch processing is where similar transactions are gathered into batches, then each batch is sorted and
processed by computer
Control totals are used to make sure there have been no errors when the batch is input
Computer programs are the instructions that tell the electronics how to process data. The general term for
these is software
Each account has a unique code for identification and posting
An accounting package consists of a number of modules which perform all the tasks needed and are
usually integrated with each other
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Context
This diagram acts as a summary of all you have learned to date.
So far, we have assumed that the bookkeeping is being done by hand. Most businesses use
computers for at least some of their accounting processes. The computer works on exactly the
same principles as for manual accounting.
Overview Sales and Cash General ledger Posting from the Accounting
purchase day books book and double entry day books processes
Data input into one module is automatically transmitted to another relevant module.
Receivables General
ledger module ledger
Invoicing
Module
Inventories Report
module generator
Invoice
Invoice
You should learn the advantages and disadvantages of a computerised accounting system thoroughly.
Advantages Disadvantages
5 Ability to deal with a large volume of transactions 4 Danger of unauthorised access to files,
and process them quickly security checks need to be set up
5 Rapid analysis of data to provide useful output 4 Danger of data/program corruption
which may take a variety of forms, eg invoices, 4 Chance of incorrect/omitted input –
trial balance, aged receivables reports system of checks required
5 Integration of systems, or modules, prevents 4 'Invisibility' of data
wasteful repetition as one entry may update
4 Time and cost of installation, training
several records
and developing a coding system
5 Improved accuracy
5 Operators can be non-specialists, as use of codes
for input means correct accounts will be updated
44
Context
Remember that computers have disadvantages as well as advantages.
Expand notes on posting from the day books (section 4) and accounting for
sales tax (section 7)
Attempt Quick Quiz
46