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Financial Accounting

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Chapter 9 Internal Control and Cash Financial Accounting Dave Ludwick, P.Eng, MBA, PMP, PhD – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financial Accounting


1
Chapter 9Internal Controland Cash
2
In this chapter
Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet Balance Sheet
Current Assets Cash Chapter 9, 19 Chapter 9, 19 Chapter 9, 19 10000 Current Liabilities Accounts Payable 5000 5000
Accounts Receivable Accounts Receivable 20000 20000 Wages Payable 25000 25000 25000 25000
Notes Receivable Notes Receivable 15000 15000 Utilities Payable 2000 2000 2000 2000
Marketable Securities Marketable Securities 25000 25000 Long-Term Debt
Inventory Inventory 120000 120000 Notes Payable 20000 20000 20000 20000
Capital Assets Capital Assets Bonds Payable 600000 600000 600000 600000
Equipment Equipment 250000 250000 Owners Equity
Buildings Buildings 500000 500000 Common Stock 300000 300000 300000
Goodwill Goodwill 60000 60000 Retained Earnings 48000 48000 48000 48000
Total Assets Total Assets 1000000 1000000 Total Liabilities OE 1000000 1000000 1000000 1000000 1000000
3
Internal Control Systems
  • All policies and procedures used to
  • Protect assets
  • Ensure reliable accounting
  • Promote efficient operations
  • Encourage adherence to company policies
  • The primary purpose of internal control systems
    is to help extend the control an owner/manager
    has over the above items
  • The bigger a company gets, the less hands on
    control managers have and so the greater the need
    for controlling systems to safeguard assets

4
Principles of Internal Control
  • Ensure transactions and activities are authorized
  • Maintain records
  • Using pre-printed forms and filing procedures
    help to track the processes that run under the
    forms
  • Insure assets
  • Passes the risk of loss to a party willing to
    bear the loss (for a premium)
  • Separate record keeping from custody of assets
  • Risk of loss or theft gets reduced when the
    person having control over assets knows there is
    another person maintaining records
  • Separate duties
  • Dividing responsibilities for related
    transactions as a safety check

5
Principles of Internal Control
  • Apply technological controls
  • Use a cash register with a tape record, use time
    cards to track hourly wage earners activities
  • Computerized control systems can provide more
    security with less paper trail and less auditing
    effort but still pose challenges
  • Separating duties is even more critical the more
    technologically advanced the accounting system
  • Perform internal and external audits
  • Regularly reviewing the records helps to ensure
    any issues are reconciled within a short period
    of time and also tunes the auditor to look for
    common errors or patterns

6
Limitations of Internal Control
  • The more active people are in the internal
    control process, the more likely human error and
    human fraud can play as a factor
  • Human error results from fatigue, negligence,
    confusion or training issues
  • Human fraud is intentionally malicious activity
    designed to defeat a control system
  • Management can influence these by conveying a
    commitment and following through with processes
    that exercise control

7
Limitations of Internal Control
  • Cost-benefit
  • Its important to note that all quality assurance
    processes add no discernable value to the product
    or process (they prevent further loss).
  • Internal control is the same
  • Companies then should manage the investment they
    make in internal controls with respect to the
    return they expect to get from the effort

8
Cash
  • Cash is probably one of the most important assets
    an organization can have.
  • Cash includes currency, coins, and amounts on
    deposit in bank accounts. It also includes
    customers cheques, cashiers cheques, certified
    cheques, money orders, EFT deposits
  • Basically anything that is cash or a cash
    equivalent
  • Liquidity refers to how easily an asset can be
    converted into cash for paying obligations
  • Cash is the most fluid of assets and so can be
    easily hidden and moved. Special precautions
    should be in place to secure cash. The control
    mechanisms outlined earlier are applicable

9
Petty Cash
  • Most organizations put most of their cash in bank
    accounts so that it can earn interest but also
    that it is securely stored.
  • For many organizations, this means that all
    payments can be made by cheque. These invoke a
    highly tuned and specialized tracking system run
    by banks to secure the funds controlled by
    cheques.
  • But many small expenses are too small to pay by
    cheque (the cost/inconvenience of paying by
    cheque becomes too large)
  • Petty Cash is a small store of cash used to pay
    small incidental costs (courier fees, repairs,
    supplies)

10
Petty Cash
  • A Petty Cash fund has its own periodic cycle that
    can be used to control the small amount of funds
    on hand
  • It starts by establishing the petty cash fund
  • This establishes the petty cash fund. Now that
    it is established, it is no longer debited or
    credited, unless the owner wishes to increase it
    or decrease it

Date Account Titles and explanation PR Debit Credit
Apr 1 Petty Cash 100
Cash 100
11
Petty Cash
  • Now that Petty Cash is established, the Petty
    Cashier can use cash to pay small expenses.
  • Whenever an expense is paid directly out of petty
    cash a receipt is issued to record the purpose of
    the cash disbursement.
  • At the end of the period (month), all receipts
    are collected and examined to determine how
    various expense and asset accounts should be
    debited.
  • Exhibit 9.2 shows the Petty Cash Payments Report
    that summarizes the periods use of Petty Cash
  • Note the calculation of over/short.
  • The figures in this table are used to record
    journal entries

12
Petty Cash
  • You can see how the report translates into a
    journal entry to record the petty cash
    disbursements into the books
  • All expenses are debited (increased)
  • The cash shortage is considered an expense and
    so is also debited so that cash can be used to
    replenish all the expenses plus the shortage.
  • Note how the Petty Cash account itself is not
    touched here. It is as if the Cash account
    reaches over top of the Petty Cash account to
    cover the expenses
  • In the second journal entry, you can see how the
    Petty Cash account is increased. The Petty Cash
    account is also debited (similar to when it was
    opened) and that much more cash is added to the
    Cash credit line

13
Mid-chapter Demo Problem
  • Lets try out the Mid-chapter Demo problem
  • Establish the Castillo Companys petty cash fund
  • Record transactions and replenish the fund
  • Use a Petty Cash Payments Report to understand
    how the cash has flowed out of the account
  • Independent of the second item, reduce Petty Cash
    by 100

14
Banking Activities
  • Mentioned earlier, banking activities serve to
    secure funds.
  • This is done by storing funds in banks, but also
    by leveraging their detailed reporting system
  • Bank Account a record set up by a bank for a
    customer permitting that customer to deposit and
    withdraw funds through deposits and cheques.
  • Signature cards are used to authorize various
    people to sign company cheques
  • Bank deposits the act of delivering cash or
    equivalents to the bank. The bank will issue a
    deposit slip as proof of deposit to the account.

15
Banking Activities
  • Cheques documents written by the bank account
    customer and given to their vendors or suppliers.
  • By presenting the cheque to the bank, the vendor
    claims the funds.
  • The cheque authorizes the bank to distribute the
    funds to the vendor
  • Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) - this is a new
    fangled way of transferring money between
    business partners.
  • Far cheaper than writing and mailing cheques,
    plus it occurs instantly

16
Banking Activities
  • Credit Cards Paying by credit card is
    convenient for customers, which helps to spark
    sales
  • Allowing payment by credit card allows
    organizations to make sales where they otherwise
    may not
  • Shifts the burden of collecting on credit sales
    to a credit card company
  • The credit card company manages this assumed
    burden and associated expenses by charging the
    organization a small credit card transaction fee
  • Sometimes credit card companies also charge the
    credit card user with fees
  • The book distinguishes between a credit card and
    a bank credit card
  • The difference is the timing in payment to the
    retailer

17
Banking Activities
  • Debit Cards these cards allow funds to be
    directly transferred between the customers
    account and the organizations account.
  • Again, the bank does charge a fee for this
    service to the retailer and also sometimes to the
    customer

18
Bank Statements
  • Bank Statements are usually a monthly report
    mailed to the business owner (accounting
    department), which summarizes the transactions on
    the bank account for the stated period (Exhibit
    9.5)
  • Notice that Deposits are called Credits and
    Cheques are called debits
  • In our books, deposits are increases in cash and
    so are debits and cheques decrease cash accounts
    and so credit those accounts
  • The difference is that these statements are
    reported from the banks perspective.
  • A companys bank account is a liability on the
    books of a bank

19
Bank Reconciliation
  • Bank reconciliation is a method used to control
    and confirm the cash accounts.
  • Because of the fluid/liquid nature of cash, this
    process is extremely critical
  • In a big company, bank records may rarely match
    the company records for the bank account there
    is just too much going on.
  • Reconciliation helps to explain and reconcile the
    differences which can be caused mostly by timing
    differences.

20
Bank Reconciliation
  • Causes for differences between company and bank
    account records
  • Unrecorded funds These are deposits made and
    recorded in the books by the company but not yet
    by the bank (say, overnight deposits)
  • Outstanding cheques cheques are recorded as
    cash outlays by the company, but have not yet
    been cashed by the supplier
  • Collections or interest earned The bank may
    offer interest on savings accounts and so may
    issue interest payments to the bank account
    holder. These are recorded in the bank account
    statement unknown to the company.
  • Deductions for service fees similarly, banks
    will deduct for services fees directly from the
    bank account without informing the company.
  • Errors made by both the bank and the company

21
Reconciling a Bank Statement
  • First, note the ending date/period for the
    statement
  • Note the beginning and ending balances
  • Compare all deposits on the bank statement with
    those recorded by the accounting records.
    Identify discrepancies and determine which is
    correct
  • Compare cancelled cheques received with those
    recorded on the bank statement and with those
    recorded in the books
  • Identify outstanding cheques between the books
    and the bank account
  • Inspect all additions due to customer payments,
    interest earned, collections
  • Inspect all deductions due to service fees, NSF
    cheques, etc

22
Reconciling a Bank Statement
  • Lets walk through the bank reconciliation
    exercise on page 456 to understand how the
    company reconciles its books with its bank
    accounts
  • Build a reconciliation report (which looks like
    Exhibit 9.9, but for the next month) to summarize
    the reconciliation
  • Prepare adjusting entries for any action that was
    outstanding

23
Exercises
  • Try Exercise 9-6
  • Establish the Petty Cash account
  • Prepare the Petty Cash Payments Report
  • Complete the journal entries to replenish the
    account and record expenses

24
Exercises
  • Try Exercise 9-7. For all 3 pieces of this
    exercise
  • Establish the Petty Cash account
  • Prepare the Petty Cash Payments Report
  • Complete the journal entries to replenish the
    account and record expenses

25
Exercise
  • Try Problem 9-4A, 9-5A, 9-8A
  • Chapter 10
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