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Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Unit 3 – Journals and Ledgers, Keeping track of it all 1. The General Journal - U3 L1 Assignment 2. The Ledger and Posting Procedures - U3 L2 Assignment 3. Subsidiary Ledgers - U3 L3 Assignment Part 1 - U3 L3 Assignment Part 2 Page 1 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 1. The General Journal The Journal A journal is a book in which all parts of a transaction are recorded in one place. Transactions are easy to locate since they are recorded in the order in which they take place (chronological order). Since transactions are entered directly from a source document, such as an invoice, cheque stub, or sales slip, directly into the journal, the journal is referred to as a book of original entry. Advantages of Using a Journal 1. Provides a chronological record of business transactions to present the daily history of the business. 2. Provides more complete information about the transactions. 3. Provides an effective means of locating errors. 4. Provides a system of evidence of the transactions if source documents are lost. Page 2 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers The Journalizing Process 1. Analyze the transaction as you did when making T-account entries. Decide what account(s) is(are) to be debited and what account(s) is(are) to be credited. 2. Number the pages consecutively (Page 1, 2, 3, etc.). 3. The year is recorded at the beginning of each journal page under the word “Date”. This is followed by the month and the day. 4. The name of the account which is to be debited is entered on the same line as the date, starting at the left margin. The amount of the debit is then entered in the “Debit” column. The debit entry is always recorded before the credit entry. 5. The name of the account which is to be credited is entered on the next line, and is indented. The amount of the credit is then entered in the “Credit” column. The debit and credit entries must always be equal. 6. A brief explanation is entered on the third line, starting at the left margin. The source document number should be included, i.e., cheque, receipt, or invoice number, or whatever information is available to identify the source document. The “Post.Ref.” column is used when transaction data is transferred to the ledger accounts and will be discussed in a later lesson. 7. A blank line is left between each complete journal entry (i.e., the line following the explanation is left blank). 8. A journal entry must never be “split” over two pages. The debit, credit, and explanation must all be on a single page of the journal. Page 3 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers The Opening Entry An opening entry is made when a business first begins operation. All of the assets (debits) and liabilities plus owner’s equity (credits) are entered in one entry. The opening entry is recorded only once, when the business first opens. An entry that has more than one debit or more than one credit is referred to as a compound entry. Study the sample opening entry for Breadbasket, Inc. in the illustration shown below. Page 4 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers U3 Lesson 1 Assignment Create a folder Unit 3. Create another 2 folders inside Unit 3, one for Fly High Travel Agency and another for Chiffon Bakery. 1. Copy the Excel file U3 Fly High Ledger from the Unit 3 folder in the Outbox. Save it in your own FlyHigh folder. 2. Copy the Excel file U3 Chiffon Ledger from the Unit 3 folder in the Outbox Save it in your own Chiffon folder. 3. Complete the opening entries in the appropriate journal for both companies Fly High (Jan 1, 2005) Chiffon Bakery (July 1, 2004) Page 5 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 4. Enter the transactions below in the appropriate general journal for each of the companies—Fly High Travel Agency and Chiffon’s Bakery.DO NOT POST YET. a. Fly High Travel Agency – January, 2005 transactions b. Chiffons’ Bakery – July, 2004 transactions Page 6 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers AN OVERVIEW OF ACCOUNT STRUCTURE IN EXCEL Create the following SEPARATE files for BOTH companies: Fly High Travel Agency and Chiffon’s Bakery 1. Master File containing the following sheets: a. General Ledger (Gledger) b. General Journal (Gjournal) c. Ledger Accounts – one sheet for each account d. Trial Balance Template (linked to balance of each account) e. Balance Sheet Template (linked to balance of each Balance Sheet account) f. Income Statement Template (linked to balance of each Income Statement account) 2. Subsidiary Accounts Receivable (A/R) a. Master List – linked to Master File above b. A sheet for each customer – linked to A/R Master List 3. Subsidiary Accounts Payable (A/P) a. Master List – linked to Master File above b. A sheet for each vendor – linked to A/P Master List 4. Financials (Jan, Feb, Mar…) a. Trial Balance* 5. Financials (Jan, Feb, Mar…) a. Balance Sheet* 6. Financials (Jan, Feb, Mar…) a. Income Statement* * For each financial file, do Past Special > Values. You want to capture the end of the month situation. THESE FILES ARE NOT LINKED. Page 7 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 2. The Ledger and Posting Procedures The Ledger The journal is the first place to record transactions. It is important for a business to keep a record of all the transactions. However, a business also must be aware of the various account balances at all times and a journal does not provide this type of information. A business uses a group of accounts called a ledger to provide it with detailed account information. In this lesson, you will learn how to transfer transaction data from the journal to the ledger. You will be using Excel to create the ledger. A ledger is a group of accounts. The ledger shows the current balance of all the accounts and the separate entries made to the accounts by date. There are several reasons for using a ledger system of accounts. Purposes of the Ledger 1. To sort the journal entries into accounts. 2. To summarize the effect of transactions on accounts. 3. To show in one place the total amount of each account. 4. To supply account balances to prepare an up-to-date balance sheet and income statement. Page 8 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Posting After a transaction has been entered into the journal, the information must be transferred to the appropriate ledger accounts. This is accomplished by a procedure called posting. Study the steps of the posting procedure as described and illustrated below. Steps in Posting 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Locate the Account Record the Date Enter the Amount Calculate the New Balance Complete the Ledger Posting Reference Column Complete the Journal posting Reference Column The general ledger in this course will be created in a spreadsheet. These transactions for Petal Florist, which were journalized previously, must now be posted. Page 9 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Posting References As the transaction data is transferred from the journal to the ledger, posting references are entered into the Post. Ref. columns of the ledger and the journal. These numbers provide a means of cross-referencing transaction data between the journal and the ledger. The posting procedure is illustrated for the following journal entry: Posting References are described and illustrated below. Repeat the posting procedure for each journal entry in the same manner. Page 10 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Purposes of Posting References 1. In the Journal – the ledger account number indicates which entries have been posted to the ledger. 2. In the Ledger – the journal page number indicates where more information about the transaction can be found. 3. Enables auditors to examine financial records easily. Page 11 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Chart of Accounts Each account in the ledger is assigned an account number and an account title. The accounts are given numbers which place them in the same order as they appear on the balance sheet and income statement. These numbers are usually assigned in the following series and sequence: This course will use the number series as illustrated above. However, some systems, such as Simply Accounting, use the number series in thousands rather than in hundreds. The main rule to remember is that Assets begin with the number 1, Liabilities begin with 2, Owner’s Equity begins with 3, Revenues begin with 4 and Expenses begin with 5. By listing the names and account numbers of all the accounts in the ledger, a business creates a chart of accounts. When assigning account numbers, be sure to leave a gap of approximately ten between accounts to allow for other accounts to be inserted. This allows for accounts to be listed in order of liquidity. Note the chart of accounts for Petal Florist. Page 12 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Opening the Ledger Accounts You learned in a previous lesson how to journalize a business’ beginning assets, liabilities and owner’s equity in an opening entry. Since this is the beginning of a business, the ledger must be opened as well. This procedure involves naming and numbering accounts for all of the items listed in the opening entry. Then the balance for each account must be posted from the journal opening entry to the ledger accounts and cross-referenced with posting references. This process is called opening the ledger. New accounts can be added as they are needed. Study the procedure for opening ledger accounts as illustrated below. 1. Enter the name of the account to the right of the word ACCOUNT. 2. Enter the account number at the far right on the top line. 3. Enter the date in the date column. 4. Enter Opening Entry in the particulars column. 5. Record the amount in the debit or credit column. 6. Enter the balance in the balance column. 7. Enter Dr or Cr in the DR/CR column appropriately. 8. Enter J1 for general journal page 1 in the P.R. column. 9. Enter the ledger account number in the P.R. column of the general journal. 10. Put the account in number order in the ledger. Open the file: U3 Fly High Ledger that you have already saved. You will need to create a sheet for each account in the general ledger file. Name the sheet the account name, but keep the name short and do not use spaces. Enter a similar format as shown below. Enter the formula in cell G6 as shown below. This formula is for a normal debit balance. If the balance is normally a credit balance, then reverse the calculation to read =G5-D6+E6. Fill this formula down through G8. Each time an entry is made to the account, insert a blank row for the entry and fill the formula down again. Note that a ledger file for the Cash Account and Bank Loan Payable have already been set up for you. By right-clicking on one of these tabs you can use the Move/Copy option to copy the sheet and then change the account name, reference number and opening balance (found on the General Journal sheet). Be sure to duplicate the Cash sheet for debit accounts and the Bank Loan Payable for Credit accounts otherwise you will have to change the formula for calculating the balance. Take note of the formula used to calculate the ledger balance. Insert a blank row for each new ledger entry. This will enable you to carry a balance for the account as shown below. Page 13 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Forwarding Procedure Forwarding occurs whenever a ledger account page is full and it is necessary to begin a new page for the same account. The last balance on the old page is transferred to the top of the new page. Electronic procedures vary from manual procedures in that automated features are used for page numbering and headers and footers. General Journal for Petal Florist after Posting – Page 14 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers U3 Lesson 2 Assignment 1. Open the files that you created in Lesson 1 of this module—FlyHighTravel and ChiffonBakery. 2. A Chart of Accounts for each company has been created on a worksheet called ChartAccounts. 3. You will need to open ledger accounts (as in the Chart of Accounts – note that you will NOT need one for Accounts Receivable or Accounts Payable, these will be dealt with in the next lesson) for each company. Use a new sheet for each account. Name the tab of each sheet the name of the account—e.g.the accounts Cash and Bank Loan Payable have already been set up in the tabs named Cash and BankLoanPay. By right-clicking on one of these tabs you can use the Move/Copy option to copy the sheet and then change the account name, reference number and opening balance (found in the opening entries on the General Journal sheet). Be sure to duplicate the Cash sheet for debit accounts and the Bank Loan Payable for credit accounts otherwise you will have to change the formula for calculating the balance. Remember that the opening balances for the accounts come from the opening entries in the General Journal. The income and expense account balances are all zero as are the drawing accounts 4. A sheet GLAccountList has been created in each company file for the general ledger account listing. The accounts have been listed but you need to link the cells to the balance in each account (e.g., Cash, formula would look like =Cash!G7). Links have already been set up for Cash and Bank Loan Payable. Note that we will deal with the accounts Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable in the next lesson. 5. Save and close each file. Page 15 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 3. Subsidiary Ledgers Source Documents Source documents are business forms that contain evidence of business transactions on a certain date. These documents begin the accounting process (cycle) by providing the necessary information for journal entries. Source documents act as a basic proof if records are questioned and they also provide additional information which may not be recorded in accounting records. Types of Source Documents The main types of source documents are: 1. Purchase Invoice – a source document, received by the buyer, that gives evidence of a purchase of assets or services on account 2. Sales Invoice – a source document issued by the seller when a sale is made on account Example of purchase invoice for the buyer and a sale invoice for the seller 3. Cash Sales Slip – a source document completed by the seller when the sale was made for cash 4. Cheque Copy – a source document which remains after a cheque is completed. The payer keeps a copy of the cheque as evidence of the money sent 5. Cash Receipt – generally a list of cash or cheques received. This is usually done on a daily basis and then used to make journal entries, while the cash and cheques are deposited in a financial institution Other source documents might include: a. b. c. d. a bank deposit slip a payroll clock card a credit note (for goods returned to supplier) a chequebook stub recording a payment made Page 16 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Transactions - Source documents: Analyze the source documents illustrated below. Then review the entries to record each transaction in the general journal shown below. 1. Transaction #1 2. Transaction #2 3. Transaction #3 Page 17 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 4. Transaction #4 5. Transaction #5 6. Transaction #6 Page 18 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Page 19 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Accounts Receivable Ledger To improve efficiency and control, and to prevent overcrowding in the general ledger, the individual customer (receivable) accounts are removed from the general ledger and grouped together in a book called the Accounts Receivable Subsidiary Ledger. The Accounts Receivable clerk records sales invoices, payments received from customers and credit invoices (for customer goods returned). The individual customer accounts are replaced in the general ledger by a control account called Accounts Receivable. The Accounts Receivable control account balance must equal the balance of all the customer accounts added together. The individual accounts for Petal Florist’s customers are shown below: Page 20 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers The schedule of accounts receivable for Petal Florist is illustrated below: The individual customer account balances are not shown on the trial balance. The total of the accounts receivable balance is the amount shown on the trial balance for the control account, Accounts Receivable. Page 21 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Accounts Payable Ledger To improve efficiency and control, and to prevent overcrowding in the general ledger, the individual creditor (payable) accounts are removed from the general ledger and grouped together in a book called the Accounts Payable Subsidiary Ledger. The Accounts Payable clerk records purchase invoices, cheque copies (from payments made to creditors) and credit invoices (for goods to creditors). The individual creditor accounts are replaced in the general ledger by a control account called Accounts Payable. The Accounts Payable control account balance must equal the balance of the total of the creditor accounts. The individual accounts for Petal Florist’s vendors are shown below: The schedule of accounts payable for Petal Florist is illustrated below: Page 22 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers The individual vendor account balances are not shown on the trial balance. The total of the accounts payable balance is the amount shown on the trial balance for the control account, Accounts Payable. Page 23 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers U3 Lesson 3 Assignment Part 1 1. The Excel files U3 Fly High Acc Rec SubLedger, U3 Fly High Acc Pay SubLedger, U3 Chiffon Acc Rec SubLedger and U3 Chiffon Acc Pay SubLedger are in the U3 folder in the Outbox. Copy them into the appropriate folder. You will need to link each subsidiary ledger to the general ledger later. First you will need to set up a worksheet for each customer/vendor. One of each has already been done for you to copy. The opening balances for each account are below. Fly High Travel Agency - balances as of January 1 - Chiffon's Bakery - balances as of July 1 – Page 24 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Updated Trial Balance Recording transactions results in changes to the ledger accounts. Once these changes have been recorded in the appropriate accounts, the previous trial balance and financial statements (income statement and balance sheet) become outdated. This provides the need for an updated or current trial balance. Most businesses prepare a trial balance every month. All debit account balances and credit account balances are totaled. The totals should equal, indicating the mathematical accuracy of the ledger. The trial balance for Petal Florist is shown here. Note that the total on the Schedule of Accounts Receivable is the same as the amount for the control account, Accounts Receivable, on the Trial Balance and the total on the Schedule of Accounts Payable is the same as the amount for the control account, Accounts Payable, on the Trial Balance. Study the illustrated trial balance shown below: Page 25 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers Finding and Correcting Errors Information on finding and correcting errors can be found on the Internet The Accounting Cycle In the previous lessons, you completed the following steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. Journalizing transactions from source documents; Posting transactions to appropriate ledger accounts; Proving the ledger’s accuracy by preparing a trial balance; Preparing financial statements once the ledger is in balance. Each of these steps is part of the set of accounting procedures completed in each accounting period for all accounting systems. This set of procedures is known as the accounting cycle. These steps must be completed in the proper sequence in each accounting period. Page 26 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers U3 Lesson 3 Assignment Part 2 1. Journalize the following transactions in the General Journal Fly High Travel Agency - Chiffon's Bakery - 2. Post the journal entries from Module 3, Lesson 1, Question 3 and from question #2 above in the General Ledger or the Subsidiary Ledger as appropriate. In the General Journal, record the Account Number (Acct.No.) in the post referencing (P.R.) column to indicate that posting is complete. Record the journal page number in each account that you post to indicating also that posting is complete. 3. A schedule of Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable for each company has been included in each subsidiary ledger. You will need to set up links for each accounts balance – an example has been done for you. The balance from this schedule should be linked to the list of accounts in the General Ledger. Page 27 of 28 Accounting 30S Unit 3: Journals and Ledgers 4. Prepare an updated trial balance sheet for Fly High Travel and for Chiffon's Bakery for the end of each month (Fly High = January 31/05; Chiffon = July 31/04) Use the worksheet for the trial balance in the workbook for the above companies. Set up the trial balance template using formulas for each account balance--link to the cell of the balance of each account in the ledger. 5. Prepare an Income Statement for Fly High Travel and for Chiffon's Bakery for the the month ending (Fly High = January 31/05; Chiffon = July 31/04) Use the worksheet for the income statement in the workbook for the above companies. Set up the Income statement template using formulas for each account balance--link to the cell of the balance of each account in the Trial Balance. 6. Prepare a Balance Sheet for Fly High Travel and for Chiffon's Bakery for the the end of each month (Fly High = January 31/05; Chiffon = July 31/04) Use the worksheet for the balance sheet in the workbook for the above companies. Set up the balance sheet template using formulas for each account balance--link to the cell of the balance of each account in the Trial Balance and Income Statement. Page 28 of 28