Accounting1 Chapter 6 (The Journal and Source Documents)
Grade 11 Accounting
Textbook: Accounting 1 (7th edition) By: George Syme, Tim Ireland, Colin Dodds.
6.1- The Two-Column General Journal
- Journalizing is the process of recording accounting entries in the journal
- All transactions are recorded in the journal prior to being recorded in the ledger accounts
- Main purpose of the journal is to provide a continuous record of accounting entries in the order in which they occur
- Transactions are separated by blank lines
- The debit account is recorded before the credit account (credit account is indented)
The Steps to Record a Journal Entry
- Enter the date as well as the year and month
- Enter the names of the accounts in the particulars column (debit accounts go first, followed by credit accounts)
- Enter the values of the accounts (they should balance)
- Write a brief explanation about the transaction after the credit account (in the particular column) make sure to include a source document number
TO NOTE
- The month and year are not repeated every entry (only once the month or year has changed)
- The date (eg 21) is repeated for each transaction, no matter how many transactions happen on a given day
- Enter the journal page number at the top
The Opening Entry
Every accounting entry is recorded first in the journal as a way to show the starting balances as well as the different accounts.
6.2- Source Documents
- A source document is a business paper that shows the nature of a transaction and provides all the information needed to account for it properly
- Source documents show that transactions are valid (proof of transaction)
- Cheque Almost all transactions have a source document (except for eg if the owner draws money from the business' bank for personal use)
IMPORTANT FOR
- For reference
- For finding errors
- For verifying transactions
Types of Source Documents
1. Cash Sales Slip
- Goods/services are sold to a customer for cash
- Debit Bank, Credit Fees Earned
2. Sales Invoice
- Goods/services are sold on Account
- Vendor is the seller, purchaser is the buyer
- Debit A/R, Credit Fees Earned
3. Point of Sales Summaries
- At the end of the day a POS is printed which compares the sales activity of credit and debit cards with a bank statement
- A transaction log is also generated (name and card number)
- Debit Bank, Credit Fees Earned (same as cash sales slip)
4. Purchase Invoice
- Represents a purchase of services or goods on account
- Debit an Asset or Expense, Credit an A/P
5. Cheque Copies
- Is a document supporting the accounting entry for a payment by cheque
- Paying an Asset (Debit A/P, Credit Bank)
- Cash purchase of an Asset (Debit Asset, Credit Bank)
- Cash Payment for an expense (Debit Expense, Credit Bank)
- Owner withdraws for personal use (Debit Drawings, Credit Bank)
6. Cash Receipts Daily Summary
- Business paper that lists the money coming in from the customers (shows the customer name, dollar amounts, what they're paying for)
- Remittance Advice is a form accompanying the cheque explaining the payment
- Debit Bank, Credit A/R
7. Bank Advices
- When a bank initiates a change in the bank account of a business
- Bank Debit Advice: Bank document informing the business of a decrease made to the business' bank account
- Debit Bank Charges, Credit Bank
- Bank Credit Advice: Bank document informing the business of an increase made to the business' bank account
- Debit Bank, Credit Bank Charges
6.3- Sales Tax
Taxes are a way in which the government raises funds to pay for services.
Two tax systems are used in Canada
1. PSG/ GST System
- PST- Provincial Sales Tax (8% Ontario)
- Services are exempt from PST
- GST- Goods and Services Tax (5%)
- Allows businesses to get refund from GST they pay when buying assets or expenses
2. HST System
- Harmonized Sales Tax
- One tax that combines PST and GST (13% in Ontario)
- Businesses receive a refund for any HST paid when purchasing assets and expenses
Accounting for Taxes
Businesses collect tax money on behalf of the government on all sales
- Uses a tax payable account to record this in the ledger/ accounting journal
- Eg; Debit Bank $535, Credit Sales $500, Credit PST Payable $35 (recorded as a liability on the balance sheet)
Remitting Taxes- sending tax money collected on behalf of the government, to the government
- For all PST, all tax charged in a month is remitted on the 15th day of the following month
- Eg; Debit PST Payable $35, Credit Bank $35
Businesses with sales of taxable goods and services of $30,000 or more must register for a GST/HST number and collect and remit GST/HST
Taxation Principles
- A business keeps track of its purchases on a separate account (HST) so it can deduct it from its HST Tax liability (since businesses get refunds on purchases with HST)
- Tax Dollars are collected by the seller and recorded in a separate liability account
- Tax Dollars rightfully belong to the government
- The seller sends the tax dollars to the government at appointed times
Accounting for Provincial Sales Tax
- The tax is added to the normal price of the goods
- The retailer collects the money from the customer on behalf of the government
- The collected account from the customer accumulates in a liability account "PST Payable"
- Remit the accumulated sales tax to the government
There are two accounts for HST in the ledger
- HST Payable
- HST Recoverable
Contra Account: An account that has a balance that reduces the balance of a closely related account
Eg 1; Sold $1,500 of goods on account to S.Wilson. HST amounts to $195
A/R S. Wilson $1,695
Sales $1,500
HST Payable $195
Eg 2; Sammy Services buys $500 of office equipment from Home Depot by cash. HST amounts to $65
Office Equipment $500
HST Recoverable $65
Bank $565
Eg 3; By the end of the month Sammy Services has a balance of $2,000 in HST payable and a balance of $600 in HST Recoverable. They must remit their taxes to the government.
HST Payable $2,000
HST Recoverable $600
Bank $1,400