Title: Current Liabilities, Contingencies, and the Time Value of Money
1Chapter 9
Current Liabilities, Contingencies, and Payroll
Financial Accounting 4e by Porter and Norton
2McDonald's CorporationPartial Balance Sheet -
2001
Listed in order of liquidity
(in millions)
- Liabilities and shareholders' equity
- Current liabilities
- Notes payable 184.9
- Accounts payable 689.5
- Income taxes 20.4
- Other taxes 180.4
- Accrued interest 170.6
- Other accrued liabilities 824.9
- Current maturities of long-term debt 177.6
- Total current liabilities 2,248.3
-
Require payment within one year
3Accounts Payable
- Purchase of inventory, goods or services on credit
4Promissory Note
I promise to pay 1,000 plus 12 annual interest
on December 31, 2004. Date January 1,
2004 Signed_________
Lamanski Co.
S.J.Devona
Total repayment 1,120 1,000 (1,000 x 12)
5Current Maturities of Long-Term Debt
- Principal repayment on borrowings due within one
year of balance sheet date
Due in upcoming year
8
6Taxes Payable
- Record expense when incurred not when paid
12/31/04
3/15/05
Record 2004 tax expense
Taxes Paid
7Contingent Liability
- Obligation involving existing condition
- Outcome not known with certainty
- Dependent upon some future event
- Actual amount is estimated
11
8Contingent Liability
- Accrue estimated amount if
- liability is probable
- amount can be reasonably estimated
In year criteria are met Expense
(loss) XXX Liability XXX
9Typical Contingent Liabilities
- Warranties
- Premium or coupon offers
- Lawsuits
13
10Recording Contingent Liabilities
Example
- Quickkey Computer sells a computer product for
5,000 with a one-year warranty. In 2004, 100 of
these products were sold for a total sales
revenue of 500,000. - Analyzing past records, Quickkey estimates that
repairs will average 2 of total sales.
11Recording Contingent Liabilities
Probable liability has been incurred? Amount
reasonably estimable?
YES
YES
Record in 2004
Warranty Expense 100,000 Estimated
Liability 100,000
12Disclosing Contingent Liabilities
IF not probable but reasonably
possible OR amount not estimable
13Contingent Assets
- Contingent gains and assets are not recorded but
may be disclosed in footnotes
- Conservatism principle applies
17
14 Appendix
- Accounting Tools
- Payroll Accounting
15Calculation of Gross Wages
- Hourly
- Multiply the number of hours worked times
employees hourly rate - Salaried
- Paid at a flat rate per week, month, or year,
regardless of hours
16Calculation of Net Pay
- Gross wages
- - Income tax (federal, state, local)
- - FICA
- - Voluntary deductions
- (includes health insurance, retirement
contributions, savings plans, charitable
contributions, union dues) - Net pay
17Employer Payroll Taxes
- Not deducted from paycheck employer pays taxes
per employee, in addition to salary - FICA employers share
- Unemployment tax
18Payroll Accounting
Example
Gross wages for Kori Company for July are
100,000. The following amounts have been
withheld from employees paychecks Kori
Companys unemployment tax rate is 3. Make the
appropriate payroll entries.
Income Tax 20,000 FICA 7,650 United
Way contributions 5,000 Union dues 3,000
19Payroll Accounting
- Salary Expense 100,000
- Salary Payable 64,350
- Income Tax Payable 20,000
- FICA Payable 7,650
- United Way Payable 5,000
- Union Dues Payable 3,000
- To record July salary deductions
20Payroll Accounting
- Salary Payable
- Cash
- To record payment of employee salaries
- Payroll Tax Expense
- FICA Payable
- Unemployment Tax Payable
- To record employers payroll taxes
21Compensated Absences
- Employee absences for which the employee will be
paid - Vacation, illness, holidays
- Accrued as a liability if
- The services have been rendered
- The rights (days) accumulate
- Payment is probable and can be reasonably
estimated
22End of Chapter 9