Title: GUIDE TO YOUR GOLF EQUIPMENT
1The difference between payments and
disbursements
- Disbursement Accounts Shipping Companies
2What is a payment?
- How a payment is made will differ from contract
to contract, but the result is the same. A
payment is what is the agreed value of a product
or service that a party provides in exchange for
that product or service, and it is paid directly
to the producer of that product or service. - ForMore
- Disbursements Accounting
- Disbursement Accounts
- Disbursement Account
- Proforma Disbursement Account
3What is a disbursement?
- As a business grows, not all purchases are direct
deposits from one business to another. To best
track the movement of cash flow, a business will
set up accounts that hold a dedicated fund from
which disbursements are made for payment of goods
and services. There are also cash disbursements,
which are typically used for customer
reimbursement, operating expenses, and accounts
receivable. - ForMore
- Accounting For Shipping Company
- PDA Port Charges
- DA Shipping
4Examples of disbursements
- For example, many real estate transactions use
escrow accounts. A disbursement is a form of
payment from a dedicated or third party account
with the expectation that the amount is
reimbursed. For example, lets say your business
wants packaging labels with your logo on it. You
order labels from a third party vendor that
prints graphics onto labels. When you receive an
invoice for your order, it includes a line item
for blank rolls of labels. The third-party vendor
you used initially sent a disbursement payment to
another business that produces label rolls with
the anticipation that your business will
ultimately reimburse that amount when you pay
your invoice. Disbursements are tracked in the
general ledger by the bookkeeper.
5How does a disbursement differ from a payment?
- Creating these outflow accounts from which
disbursements are drawn is an important practice
for monitoring cash flow. Unlike payments,
disbursements are an indication of actual
business activity and will help advise future
financial decisions. When disbursements are made,
it is important that very detailed information is
recorded. The amount, the date, the payee, and
the reason for the purchase or the intended use
are all useful data points. If a disbursement
account is low or negative at the end of a
designated cycle it may be an indication of a
disconnect between what is out-going and what is
being invoiced. Not only can questions about
labor rates or raw material quantities be
assessed, but best practices for disbursement
approvals can also be established.
6Why does the distinction between payment and
disbursement matter?
- A disbursement is always a payment of some kind,
but a payment is not always a disbursement.
Understanding the distinction is important
because different payments may be subject to fees
like VAT or taxes. For example, a baker purchases
flour and sugar, these items are tax exempt. Not
only will tax be collected at the final sale to a
market goer, the disbursement will also be
reimbursed since the cost of raw materials is
built into the cost of each pastry. However, the
baker also needs a new spatula which will not be
resold and is subject to tax at the time of
purchase, this payment will be drawn from a
different account. By differentiating where the
cash flow is coming and going will help the baker
report accurately come tax season. - By understanding the difference between a
disbursement and a payment, a business can best
track what they do, and how they do it. Knowing
that payments may be subject to fees prevents
issues should an audit occur. And utilizing
disbursement accounts helps to determine what to
invoice for as well as informs future budgetary
decisions. Taken together, a business is able to
manage cash flow and monitor business health.
7Contact Us
- 2nd Floor, Al Shaiba Building
- P.O. Box 345814
- Dubai Outsource City, UAE
- Office 971 4 3636200
- https//www.da-desk.com/