Receivables and Payables

Site: Saylor Academy
Course: BUS103: Introduction to Financial Accounting
Book: Receivables and Payables
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Date: Friday, April 26, 2024, 11:23 PM

Description

This chapter discusses accounts receivable, uncollectible accounts, bad debts, and accounts payable.

Pay attention to aging schedules, how to write off receivables, and how credit card transactions should be identified and recorded from the business entity's perspective. Various forms of liabilities that a company might incur are described. Since most businesses operate mainly on credit sales, it is important to understand the implications of your credit and collections policies. Liabilities can be strategically important for a business, and are a necessary part of doing business. However, debt increases the risk of a company, and managing liabilites is crucial for business survival.

Learning objectives

After studying this chapter, you should be able to:

•  Account for uncollectible accounts receivable under the allowance method.

•  Record credit card sales and collections.

•  Define liabilities, current liabilities, and long-term liabilities.

•  Define and account for clearly determinable, estimated, and contingent liabilities.

•  Account for notes receivable and payable, including calculation of interest.

•  Account for borrowing money using an interest-bearing note versus a non interest-bearing note.

•  Analyze and use the financial results - accounts receivable turnover and the number of days' sales in accounts receivable.



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A career in litigation support

What is litigation support? It does not mean working in an attorney's office. It involves assisting legal counsel in attempting to gain favorable verdicts in a court of law. Persons involved in litigation support generally work for a public accounting firm, a consulting firm, or as a sole proprietor or in partnership with others. An experienced litigation support person can expect to earn an income well into six figures.

Litigation support in a broad sense encompasses fraud auditing, valuation analysis, investigative accounting, and forensic accounting. The practice of litigation support involves assisting legal counsel in such things as product liability disputes, shareholder disputes, contract breaches, and major losses reported by entities. These investigations require the accountant to gather and evaluate evidence to assess the integrity and dollar amounts surrounding the aforementioned situations.

The accountant can be, and often is, requested to serve as an expert witness in a court of law. This experience requires knowledge of accounting and auditing in addition to possessing good communication skills, appropriate credentials, relevant experience, and critical information that could result in successful resolution of the issue.

What kind of person pursues litigation support as a career? It takes a very special individual. The person must be part accountant, part auditor, part lawyer, and part skilled businessperson. An undergraduate accounting degree, an MBA, and a law degree would be the perfect educational background needed for such a career. Many universities offer a combined MBA/JD program. Such a program fulfills the graduate needs of the litigation support person.

In addition to the degree, work experience in the business sector is essential. A career in public accounting, industry, or with a government agency would serve as valuable experience in pursuing a career in litigation support.

Much of the growth of business in recent years is due to the immense expansion of credit. Managers of companies have learned that by granting customers the privilege of charging their purchases, sales and profits increase. Using credit is not only a convenient way to make purchases but also the only way many people can own highpriced items such as automobiles.

This chapter discusses receivables and payables. For a company, a receivable is any sum of money due to be paid to that company from any party for any reason. Similarly, a payable describes any sum of money to be paid by that company to any party for any reason.

Primarily, receivables arise from the sale of goods and services. The two types of receivables are accounts receivable, which companies offer for short-term credit with no interest charge; and notes receivable, which companies sometimes extend for both short-and long-term credit with an interest charge. We pay particular attention to accounting for uncollectible accounts receivable.

Like their customers, companies use credit, which they show as accounts payable or notes payable. Accounts payable normally result from the purchase of goods or services and do not carry an interest charge. Short-term notes payable carry an interest charge and may arise from the same transactions as accounts payable, but they can also result from borrowing money from a bank or other institution. Chapter 4 identified accounts payable and short-term notes payable as current liabilities. A company also incurs other current liabilities, including payables such as sales tax payable, estimated product warranty payable, and certain liabilities that are contingent on the occurrence of future events. Long-term notes payable usually result from borrowing money from a bank or other institution to finance the acquisition of plant assets. As you study this chapter and learn how important credit is to our economy, you will realize that credit in some form will probably always be with us.


Accounts receivable

In Chapter 3, you learned that most companies use the accrual basis of accounting since it better reflects the actual results of the operations of a business. Under the accrual basis, a merchandising company that extends credit records revenue when it makes a sale because at this time it has earned and realized the revenue. The company has earned the revenue because it has completed the seller's part of the sales contract by delivering the goods. The company has realized the revenue because it has received the customer's promise to pay in exchange for the goods. This promise to pay by the customer is an account receivable to the seller. Accounts receivable are amounts that customers owe a company for goods sold and services rendered on account. Frequently, these receivables resulting from credit sales of goods and services are called trade receivables.

When a company sells goods on account, customers do not sign formal, written promises to pay, but they agree to abide by the company's customary credit terms. However, customers may sign a sales invoice to acknowledge purchase of goods. Payment terms for sales on account typically run from 30 to 60 days. Companies usually do not charge interest on amounts owed, except on some past-due amounts.

Because customers do not always keep their promises to pay, companies must provide for these uncollectible accounts in their records. Companies use two methods for handling uncollectible accounts. The allowance method provides in advance for uncollectible accounts. The direct write-off method recognizes bad accounts as an expense at the point when judged to be uncollectible and is the required method for federal income tax purposes. However, since the allowance method represents the accrual basis of accounting and is the accepted method to record uncollectible accounts for financial accounting purposes, we only discuss and illustrate the allowance method in this text.

Even though companies carefully screen credit customers, they cannot eliminate all uncollectible accounts. Companies expect some of their accounts to become uncollectible, but they do not know which ones. The matching principle requires deducting expenses incurred in producing revenues from those revenues during the accounting period. The allowance method of recording uncollectible accounts adheres to this principle by recognizing the uncollectible accounts expense in advance of identifying specific accounts as being uncollectible. The required entry has some similarity to the depreciation entry in Chapter 3 because it debits an expense and credits an allowance (contra asset). The purpose of the entry is to make the income statement fairly present the proper expense and the balance sheet fairly present the asset. Uncollectible accounts expense (also called doubtful accounts expense or bad debts expense) is an operating expense that a business incurs when it sells on credit. We classify uncollectible accounts expense as a selling expense because it results from credit sales. Other accountants might classify it as an administrative expense because the credit department has an important role in setting credit terms.

To adhere to the matching principle, companies must match the uncollectible accounts expense against the revenues it generates. Thus, an uncollectible account arising from a sale made in 2010 is a 2010 expense even though this treatment requires the use of estimates. Estimates are necessary because the company sometimes cannot determine until 2008 or later which 2010 customer accounts will become uncollectible.

Recording the uncollectible accounts adjustment A company that estimates uncollectible accounts makes an adjusting entry at the end of each accounting period. It debits Uncollectible Accounts Expense, thus recording the operating expense in the proper period. The credit is to an account called Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts.

As a contra account to the Accounts Receivable account, the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (also called Allowance for doubtful accounts or Allowance for bad debts) reduces accounts receivable to their net realizable value. Net realizable value is the amount the company expects to collect from accounts receivable. When the firm makes the uncollectible accounts adjusting entry, it does not know which specific accounts will become uncollectible. Thus, the company cannot enter credits in either the Accounts Receivable control account or the customers' accounts receivable subsidiary ledger accounts. If only one or the other were credited, the Accounts Receivable control account balance would not agree with the total of the balances in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger. Without crediting the Accounts Receivable control account, the allowance account lets the company show that some of its accounts receivable are probably uncollectible.

To illustrate the adjusting entry for uncollectible accounts, assume a company has USD 100,000 of accounts receivable and estimates its uncollectible accounts expense for a given year at USD 4,000. The required year-end adjusting entry is:    

Dec.

Uncollectible Accounts Expense (-SE)

4,000

 

31

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (-A)

 

4,000

 

To record estimated uncollectible accounts.

   

 

The debit to Uncollectible Accounts Expense brings about a matching of expenses and revenues on the income statement; uncollectible accounts expense is matched against the revenues of the accounting period. The credit to Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts reduces accounts receivable to their net realizable value on the balance sheet. When the books are closed, the firm closes Uncollectible Accounts Expense to Income Summary. It reports the allowance on the balance sheet as a deduction from accounts receivable as follows:

Brice Company Balance Sheet 2010 December 31

Current assets

   

Cash

 

$21,200

Accounts receivable

$100,000

 

Less: Allowance for uncollectible accounts

4,000

96,000

 

Estimating uncollectible accounts Accountants use two basic methods to estimate uncollectible accounts for a period. The first method - percentage-of-sales method - focuses on the income statement and the relationship of uncollectible accounts to sales. The second method - percentage-of-receivables method - focuses on the balance sheet and the relationship of the allowance for uncollectible accounts to accounts receivable.

Percentage-of-sales method The percentage-of-sales method estimates uncollectible accounts from the credit sales of a given period. In theory, the method is based on a percentage of prior years' actual uncollectible accounts to prior years' credit sales. When cash sales are small or make up a fairly constant percentage of total sales, firms base the calculation on total net sales. Since at least one of these conditions is usually met, companies commonly use total net sales rather than credit sales. The formula to determine the amount of the entry is:

Amount of journal entry for uncollectible accounts – Net sales (total or credit) x Percentage estimated as uncollectible

To illustrate, assume that Rankin Company's uncollectible accounts from 2008 sales were 1.1 percent of total net sales. A similar calculation for 2009 showed an uncollectible account percentage of 0.9 percent. The average for the two years is 1 percent [(1.1 +0.9)/2]. Rankin does not expect 2010 to differ from the previous two years. Total net sales for 2010 were USD 500,000; receivables at year-end were USD 100,000; and the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts had a zero balance. Rankin would make the following adjusting entry for 2010:

Dec. 31 Uncollectible Accounts Expense (-SE) 5,000 Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (-A) 5,000

To record estimated uncollectible accounts ($500,000 X 0.01).

Using T-accounts, Rankin would show:

Uncollectible Accounts Expense

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts

Dec. 31

 

Bal. before

 

Adjustment

5,000

adjustment

-0-

 

 

Dec. 31

 

 

 

Adjustment

5,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bal. after

5,000

 

 

 

adjustment

 

Rankin reports Uncollectible Accounts Expense on the income statement. It reports the accounts receivable less the allowance among current assets in the balance sheet as follows:

Accounts receivable

$100,000

$100,000

Less: Allowance for uncollectible accounts

5,000

$95,000

Or Rankin's balance sheet could show: Accounts receivable (less estimated uncollectible accounts, $5,000)

 $95,000  $95,000

 

On the income statement, Rankin would match the uncollectible accounts expense against sales revenues in the period. We would classify this expense as a selling expense since it is a normal consequence of selling on credit.

The Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts account usually has either a debit or credit balance before the year-end adjustment. Under the percentage-of-sales method, the company ignores any existing balance in the allowance when calculating the amount of the year-end adjustment (except that the allowance account must have a credit balance after adjustment).

For example, assume Rankin's allowance account had a USD 300 credit balance before adjustment. The adjusting entry would still be for USD 5,000. However, the balance sheet would show USD 100,000 accounts receivable less a USD 5,300 allowance for uncollectible accounts, resulting in net receivables of USD 94,700. On the income statement, Uncollectible Accounts Expense would still be 1 percent of total net sales, or USD 5,000.

In applying the percentage-of-sales method, companies annually review the percentage of uncollectible accounts that resulted from the previous year's sales. If the percentage rate is still valid, the company makes no change. However, if the situation has changed significantly, the company increases or decreases the percentage rate to reflect the changed condition. For example, in periods of recession and high unemployment, a firm may increase the percentage rate to reflect the customers' decreased ability to pay. However, if the company adopts a more stringent credit policy, it may have to decrease the percentage rate because the company would expect fewer uncollectible accounts.

Percentage-of-receivables method The percentage-of-receivables method estimates uncollectible accounts by determining the desired size of the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts. Rankin would multiply the ending balance in Accounts Receivable by a rate (or rates) based on its uncollectible accounts experience. In the percentage-of-receivables method, the company may use either an overall rate or a different rate for each age category of receivables.

To calculate the amount of the entry for uncollectible accounts under the percentage-of-receivables method using an overall rate, Rankin would use:

Amount of entry for uncollectible accounts – (Accounts receivable ending balance x percentage estimated as uncollectible) – Existing credit balance in allowance for uncollectible accounts or existing debit balance in allowance for uncollectible accounts

Using the same information as before, Rankin makes an estimate of uncollectible accounts at the end of 2010. The balance of accounts receivable is USD 100,000, and the allowance account has no balance. If Rankin estimates that 6 percent of the receivables will be uncollectible, the adjusting entry would be:

Dec.

31

Uncollectible Accounts Expense (-SE)

6,000

 

Using T-accounts, Rankin would show:

Uncollectible Accounts Expense Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts

Dec. 31

 

Bal. before

 

Adjustment

6,000

Adjustment -0-

 
   

Dec. 31

 
   

Adjustment

6,000

   

Bal. after

 
   

Adjustment

6,000


If Rankin had a USD 300 credit balance in the allowance account before adjustment, the entry would be the same, except that the amount of the entry would be USD 5,700. The difference in amounts arises because management wants the allowance account to contain a credit balance equal to 6 percent of the outstanding receivables when presenting the two accounts on the balance sheet. The calculation of the necessary adjustment is [(USD 100,000 X 0.06)-USD 300] = USD 5,700. Thus, under the percentage-of-receivables method, firms consider any existing balance in the allowance account when adjusting for uncollectible accounts. Using T-accounts, Rankin would show:

Uncollectible Accounts Expense

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts

Dec. 31

 

Bal. before

 

Adjustment

5700

Adjustment

300

   

Dec. 31

 
   

Adjustment

5700

   

Bal. after

 
   

Adjustment

6000

 

ALLEN COMPANY
Accounts Receivable Aging Schedule
2010 December 31

Customer

Accounts Receivable Balance

Not Yet Due

Days Past Due

     

1-30

31-60

61-90

Over 90

X                   

$5,000

       

$5,000

Y                   

14,000

$ 12,000

$2,000

     

Z                   

400

$200

200

     

All others

808,600

$560,000

240,000

2,000

600

6,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

$ 828,000

$560,000

$252,000

$4,000

$800

$11,200

Percentage estimated

 

1%

5%

10%

25%

50% as uncollectible

Estimated amount uncollectible

           
 

$ 24,400

$5,600

$ 12,600

$ 400

$200

$ 5,600


Exhibit 1: Accounts receivable aging schedule


As another example, suppose that Rankin had a USD 300 debit balance in the allowance account before adjustment. Then, a credit of USD 6,300 would be necessary to get the balance to the required USD 6,000 credit balance. The calculation of the necessary adjustment is [(USD 100,000 X 0.06) + USD 300] = USD 6,300. Using Taccounts, Rankin would show:

Uncollectible Accounts Expense

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts

Dec. 31

   

Bal. before

 

Dec. 31

 

Adjustment

6,300

 

Adjustment

300

Adjustment

6,300

         

Bal. after

 
         

Adjustment

6,000

 

No matter what the pre-adjustment allowance account balance is, when using the percentage-of-receivables method, Rankin adjusts the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts so that it has a credit balance of USD 6,000 - equal to 6 percent of its USD 100,000 in Accounts Receivable. The desired USD 6,000 ending credit balance in the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts serves as a "target" in making the adjustment.

So far, we have used one uncollectibility rate for all accounts receivable, regardless of their age. However, some companies use a different percentage for each age category of accounts receivable. When accountants decide to use a different rate for each age category of receivables, they prepare an aging schedule. An aging schedule classifies accounts receivable according to how long they have been outstanding and uses a different uncollectibility percentage rate for each age category. Companies base these percentages on experience. In Exhibit 1, the aging schedule shows that the older the receivable, the less likely the company is to collect it.

Classifying accounts receivable according to age often gives the company a better basis for estimating the total amount of uncollectible accounts. For example, based on experience, a company can expect only 1 percent of the accounts not yet due (sales made less than 30 days before the end of the accounting period) to be uncollectible. At the other extreme, a company can expect 50 percent of all accounts over 90 days past due to be uncollectible. For each age category, the firm multiplies the accounts receivable by the percentage estimated as uncollectible to find the estimated amount uncollectible.

The sum of the estimated amounts for all categories yields the total estimated amount uncollectible and is the desired credit balance (the target) in the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts.

Since the aging schedule approach is an alternative under the percentage-ofreceivables method, the balance in the allowance account before adjustment affects the year-end adjusting entry amount recorded for uncollectible accounts. For example, the schedule in Exhibit 1 shows that USD 24,400 is needed as the ending credit balance in the allowance account. If the allowance account has a USD 5,000 credit balance before adjustment, the adjustment would be for USD 19,400.

The information in an aging schedule also is useful to management for other purposes. Analysis of collection patterns of accounts receivable may suggest the need for changes in credit policies or for added financing. For example, if the age of many customer balances has increased to 61-90 days past due, collection efforts may have to be strengthened. Or, the company may have to find other sources of cash to pay its debts within the discount period. Preparation of an aging schedule may also help identify certain accounts that should be written off as uncollectible.

 

An accounting perspective: Business insight

According to the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, collection agencies can call persons only between 8 am and 9 pm, and cannot use foul language. Agencies can call employers only if the employers allow such calls. And, they can threaten to sue only if they really intend to do so.

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (-SE)

750

 

Accounts Receivable - Smith (-A)

 

750

To write off Smith's account as uncollectible.

 

Write-off of receivables As time passes and a firm considers a specific customer's account to be uncollectible, it writes that account off. It debits the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts. The credit is to the Accounts Receivable control account in the general ledger and to the customer's account in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger. For example, assume Smith's USD 750 account has been determined to be uncollectible. The entry to write off this account is:

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (-SE)

750

 

Accounts Receivable - Smith (-A)

 

750

To write off Smith's account as uncollectible.

 

The credit balance in Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts before making this entry represented potential uncollectible accounts not yet specifically identified. Debiting the allowance account and crediting Accounts Receivable shows that the firm has identified Smith's account as uncollectible. Notice that the debit in the entry to write off an account receivable does not involve recording an expense. The company recognized the uncollectible accounts expense in the same accounting period as the sale. If Smith's USD 750 uncollectible account were recorded in Uncollectible Accounts Expense again, it would be counted as an expense twice.

A write-off does not affect the net realizable value of accounts receivable. For example, suppose that Amos Company has total accounts receivable of USD 50,000 and an allowance of USD 3,000 before the previous entry; the net realizable value of the accounts receivable is USD 47,000. After posting that entry, accounts receivable are USD 49,250, and the allowance is USD 2,250; net realizable value is still USD 47,000, as shown here:

 

Before Write-Off

Entry for Write-Off

After Write-Off

Accounts receivable

$ 50,000 Dr.

$750 Cr.

$ 49,250 Dr.

Allowance for uncollectible accounts

3,000 Cr.

750 Dr.

2,250 Cr.

Net realizable value

$47,000

 

$ 47,000

 

You might wonder how the allowance account can develop a debit balance before adjustment. To explain this, assume that Jenkins Company began business on 2009 January 1, and decided to use the allowance method and make the adjusting entry for uncollectible accounts only at year-end. Thus, the allowance account would not have any balance at the beginning of 2009. If the company wrote off any uncollectible accounts during 2009, it would debit Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts and cause a debit balance in that account. At the end of 2009, the company would debit Uncollectible Accounts Expense and credit Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts. This adjusting entry would cause the allowance account to have a credit balance. During 2010, the company would again begin debiting the allowance account for any write-offs of uncollectible accounts. Even if the adjustment at the end of 2009 was adequate to cover all accounts receivable existing at that time that would later become uncollectible, some accounts receivable from 2010 sales may be written off before the end of 2010. If so, the allowance account would again develop a debit balance before the end-of-year 2010 adjustment.

Uncollectible accounts recovered Sometimes companies collect accounts previously considered to be uncollectible after the accounts have been written off. A company usually learns that an account has been written off erroneously when it receives payment. Then the company reverses the original write-off entry and reinstates the account by debiting Accounts Receivable and crediting Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts for the amount received. It posts the debit to both the general ledger account and to the customer's accounts receivable subsidiary ledger account. The firm also records the amount received as a debit to Cash and a credit to Accounts Receivable. And it posts the credit to both the general ledger and to the customer's accounts receivable subsidiary ledger account.

To illustrate, assume that on May 17 a company received a USD 750 check from Smith in payment of the account previously written off. The two required journal entries are:

May

17

Accounts Receivable - Smith (+A)

750

 
   

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts (-A)

 

750

   

To reverse original write-off of Smith account.

   

May

17

Cash (+A)

750

 
   

Accounts Receivable - Smith (-A)

 

750

   

To record collection of account.

   

 

The debit and credit to Accounts Receivable - Smith on the same date is to show in Smith's subsidiary ledger account that he did eventually pay the amount due. As a result, the company may decide to sell to him in the future.

When a company collects part of a previously written off account, the usual procedure is to reinstate only that portion actually collected, unless evidence indicates the amount will be collected in full. If a company expects full payment, it reinstates the entire amount of the account.

Because of the problems companies have with uncollectible accounts when they offer customers credit, many now allow customers to use bank or external credit cards.

This policy relieves the company of the headaches of collecting overdue accounts.

A broader perspective:

GECS allowance for losses on financing receivables

Recognition of losses on financing receivables. The allowance for losses on small-balance receivables reflects management's best estimate of probable losses inherent in the portfolio determined principally on the basis of historical experience. For other receivables, principally the larger loans and leases, the allowance for losses is determined primarily on the basis of management's best estimate of probable losses, including specific allowances for known troubled accounts.

All accounts or portions thereof deemed to be uncollectible or to require an excessive collection cost are written off to the allowance for losses. Small-balance accounts generally are written off when 6 to 12 months delinquent, although any such balance judged to be uncollectible, such as an account in bankruptcy, is written down immediately to estimated realizable value. Large-balance accounts are reviewed at least quarterly, and those accounts with amounts that are judged to be uncollectible are written down to estimated realizable value.

When collateral is repossessed in satisfaction of a loan, the receivable is written down against the allowance for losses to estimated fair value of the asset less costs to sell, transferred to other assets and subsequently carried at the lower of cost or estimated fair value less costs to sell. This accounting method has been employed principally for specialized financing transactions.

(In millions)

2000

1999

1998

Balance at January 1

$3,708

$3,223

$2,745

Provisions charged

     

To operations

2045

1671

1603

Net transfers related to companies acquired or sold

22

271

386

Amounts written off-net

(1,741)

(1,457)

(1,511)

Balance at December 31

$4,034

$3,708

$3,223

Source: General Electric Company, 2000 Annual Report.

 

An accounting perspective:

Uses of technology

Auditors use expert systems to review a client's internal control structure and to test the reasonableness of a client's Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts balance. The expert system reaches conclusions based on rules and information programmed into the expert system software. The rules are modeled on the mental processes that a human expert would use in addressing the situation. In the medical field, for instance, the rules constituting the expert system are derived from modeling the diagnostic decision processes of the foremost experts in a given area of medicine. A physician can input information from a remote location regarding the symptoms of a certain patient, and the expert system will provide a probable diagnosis based on the expert model. In a similar fashion, an accountant can feed client information into the expert system and receive an evaluation as to the appropriateness of the account balance or internal control structure.

Credit cards are either nonbank (e.g. American Express) or bank (e.g. VISA and MasterCard) charge cards that customers use to purchase goods and services. For some businesses, uncollectible account losses and other costs of extending credit are a burden. By paying a service charge of 2 percent to 6 percent, businesses pass these costs on to banks and agencies issuing national credit cards. The banks and credit card agencies then absorb the uncollectible accounts and costs of extending credit and maintaining records.

Usually, banks and agencies issue credit cards to approved credit applicants for an annual fee. When a business agrees to honor these credit cards, it also agrees to pay the percentage fee charged by the bank or credit agency.

When making a credit card sale, the seller checks to see if the customer's card has been canceled and requests approval if the sale exceeds a prescribed amount, such as USD 50. This procedure allows the seller to avoid accepting lost, stolen, or canceled cards. Also, this policy protects the credit agency from sales causing customers to exceed their established credit limits.

The seller's accounting procedures for credit card sales differ depending on whether the business accepts a nonbank or a bank credit card. To illustrate the entries for the use of nonbank credit cards (such as American Express), assume that a restaurant American Express invoices amounting to USD 1,400 at the end of a day. American

Express charges the restaurant a 5 percent service charge. The restaurant uses the Credit Card Expense account to record the credit card agency's service charge and makes the following entry:

Accounts Receivable - American Express (+A)

1,330

 

Credit Card Expense (-SE)

70

 

Sales (+SE)

 

1,400

To record credit card sales

   

 

The restaurant mails the invoices to American Express. Sometime later, the restaurant receives payment from American Express and makes the following entry:

Accounts Receivable - American Express (+A)

1,330

 

Credit Card Expense (-SE)

70

 

Sales (+SE)

 

1,400

To record credit card sales

   

 

To illustrate the accounting entries for the use of bank credit cards (such as VISA or MasterCard), assume that a retailer has made sales of USD 1,000 for which VISA cards were accepted and the service charge is USD 30 (which is 3 percent of sales). VISA sales are treated as cash sales because the receipt of cash is certain. The retailer deposits the credit card sales invoices in its VISA checking account at a bank just as it deposits checks in its regular checking account. The entry to record this deposit is:

Cash (+A)

970

 

Credit Card Expense (-SE)

30

 

Sales (+SE)

 

1,000

To record credit Visa card sales.

   

 

An accounting perspective:

Business insight

Recent innovations in credit cards include picture IDs on cards to reduce theft, credits toward purchases of new automobiles (e.g. General Motors cards), credit toward free trips on airlines, and cash rebates on all purchases. Discover Card, for example, remits a percentage of all charges back to credit card holders. Also, some credit card companies have reduced interest rates on unpaid balances and have eliminated the annual fee.

 

Just as every company must have current assets such as cash and accounts receivable to operate, every company incurs current liabilities in conducting its operations. Corporations (IBM and General Motors), partnerships (CPA firms), and single proprietorships (corner grocery stores) all have one thing in common - they have liabilities. The next section discusses some of the current liabilities companies incur.

Current liabilities

Current liabilities

Liabilities result from some past transaction and are obligations to pay cash, provide services, or deliver goods at some future time. This definition includes each of the liabilities discussed in previous chapters and the new liabilities presented in this chapter. The balance sheet divides liabilities into current liabilities and long-term liabilities. Current liabilities are obligations that (1) are payable within one year or one operating cycle, whichever is longer, or (2) will be paid out of current assets or create other current liabilities. Long-term liabilities are obligations that do not qualify as current liabilities. This chapter focuses on current liabilities and Chapter 15 describes long-term liabilities.

Note that the definition of a current liability uses the term operating cycle. An operating cycle (or cash cycle) is the time it takes to begin with cash, buy necessary items to produce revenues (such as materials, supplies, labor, and/or finished goods sell goods or services, and receive cash by collecting the resulting receivables. For most companies, this period is no longer than a few months. Service companies generally have the shortest operating cycle, since they have no cash tied up in inventory. Manufacturing companies generally have the longest cycle because their cash is tied up in inventory accounts and in accounts receivable before coming back. Even for manufacturing companies, the cycle is generally less than one year. Thus, as a practical matter, current liabilities are due in one year or less, and long-term liabilities are due after one year from the balance sheet date.

The operating cycles for various businesses follow:

Type of Business

Operating Cycle

Service company selling for cash only

Instantaneous

Service company selling on credit

Cash -> Accounts Receivable -> Cash

Merchandising company selling for cash

Cash -> Inventory -> Cash

Merchandising company selling on credit

Cash -> Inventory ->  Accounts receivable -> Cash

Manufacturing company selling for cash

Cash -> Materials inventory -> Work in process inventory ->  Finished goods inventory ->

 

Accounts Receivable -> Cash

 

Current liabilities fall into these three groups:

  • Clearly determinable liabilities. The existence of the liability and its amount are certain. Examples include most of the liabilities discussed previously, such as accounts payable, notes payable, interest payable, unearned delivery fees, and wages payable. Sales tax payable, federal excise tax payable, current portions of long-term debt, and payroll liabilities are other examples.
  • Estimated liabilities. The existence of the liability is certain, but its amount only can be estimated. An example is estimated product warranty payable.
  • Contingent liabilities. The existence of the liability is uncertain and usually the amount is uncertain because contingent liabilities depend (or are contingent) on some future event occurring or not occurring. Examples include liabilities arising from lawsuits, discounted notes receivable, income tax disputes, penalties that may be assessed because of some past action, and failure of another party to pay a debt that a company has guaranteed.

The following table summarizes the characteristics of current liabilities:

 

Type of Liability

Is the Existence Certain

Is the Amount Certain

Clearly determinable liabilities

Yes

Yes

Estimated liabilities

Yes

No

Contingent liabilities

No

No

 

Clearly determinable liabilities have clearly determinable amounts. In this section, we describe liabilities not previously discussed that are clearly determinable - sales tax payable, federal excise tax payable, current portions of long-term debt, and payroll liabilities. Later in this chapter, we discuss clearly determinable liabilities such as notes payable.

Sales tax payable Many states have a state sales tax on items purchased by consumers. The company selling the product is responsible for collecting the sales tax from customers. When the company collects the taxes, the debit is to Cash and the credit is to Sales Tax Payable. Periodically, the company pays the sales taxes collected to the state. At that time, the debit is to Sales Tax Payable and the credit is to Cash.

To illustrate, assume that a company sells merchandise in a state that has a 6 percent sales tax. If it sells goods with a sales price of USD 1,000 on credit, the company makes this entry:

Accounts Receivable (+A)

1,060

 

Sales (+SE)

 

1,000

Sales Tax Payable (+L)

 

60

To record sales and sales tax payable.

 

 

Now assume that sales for the entire period are USD 100,000 and that USD 6,000 is in the Sales Tax Payable account when the company remits the funds to the state taxing agency. The following entry shows the payment to the state:

Sales Tax Payable (-L)

6,000

 

Cash (-A)

 

6,000

 

An alternative method of recording sales taxes payable is to include these taxes in the credit to Sales. For instance, the previous company could record sales as follows:

Accounts Receivable (+A)

1,060

 

Sales (+SE)

 

1,060

 

When recording sales taxes in the same account as sales revenue, the firm must separate the sales tax from sales revenue at the end of the accounting period. To make this separation, it adds the sales tax rate to 100 percent and divides this percentage into recorded sales revenue. For instance, assume that total recorded sales revenues for an accounting period are USD 10,600, and the sales tax rate is 6 percent. To find the sales revenue, use the following formula:

\text { Sales }=\frac{\text { Amount recorded for sales account }}{100 \text { per cent }+\text { sales tax rate }}

=\frac{\operatorname{USD} 10,600}{106 \text { per cent }}=\operatorname{USD} 10,000

The sales revenue is USD 10,000 for the period. Sales tax is equal to the recorded sales revenue of USD 10,600 less actual sales revenue of USD 10,000, or USD 600.

Many companies use service bureaus to process their payrolls because these bureaus keep up to date on rates, bases, and changes in the laws affecting payroll. Companies can either send their data over the Internet or have the service bureaus pick up time sheets and other data. Managers instruct service bureaus either to print the payroll checks or to transfer data back to the company over the Internet so it can print the checks.

Federal excise tax payable Consumers pay federal excise tax on some goods, such as alcoholic beverages, tobacco, gasoline, cosmetics, tires, and luxury automobiles. The entries a company makes when selling goods subject to the federal excise tax are similar to those made for sales taxes payable. For example, assume that the Dixon Jewelry Store sells a diamond ring to a young couple for USD 2,000. The sale is subject to a 6 percent sales tax and a 10 percent federal excise tax. The entry to record the sale is:

Accounts Receivable (+A)

2,320

 

Sales (+L)

 

2,000

Sales Tax Payable (+L)

 

120

Federal Excise Tax Payable

 

200

To record the sale of a diamond ring.

   

                                                       

The company records the remittance of the taxes to the federal taxing agency by debiting Federal Excise Tax Payable and crediting Cash.

Current portions of long-term debt Accountants move any portion of long-term debt that becomes due within the next year to the current liability section of the balance sheet. For instance, assume a company signed a series of 10 individual notes payable for USD 10,000 each; beginning in the 6th year, one comes due each year through the 15th year. Beginning in the 5th year, an accountant would move a USD 10,000 note from the long-term liability category to the current liability category on the balance sheet. The current portion would then be paid within one year.

 

An accounting perspective:

Uses of technology

Many companies use service bureaus to process their payrolls because these bureaus keep up to date on rates, bases, and changes in the laws affecting payroll. Companies can either send their data over the Internet or have the service bureaus pick up time sheets and other data. Managers instruct service bureaus either to print the payroll checks or to transfer data back to the company over the Internet so it can print the checks.

Payroll liabilities In most business organizations, accounting for payroll is particularly important because (1) payrolls often are the largest expense that a company incurs, (2) both federal and state governments require maintaining detailed payroll records, and (3) companies must file regular payroll reports with state and federal governments and remit amounts withheld or otherwise due. Payroll liabilities include taxes and other amounts withheld from employees' paychecks and taxes paid by employers.

Employers normally withhold amounts from employees' paychecks for federal income taxes; state income taxes; FICA (social security) taxes; and other items such as union dues, medical insurance premiums, life insurance premiums, pension plans, and pledges to charities. Assume that a company had a payroll of USD 35,000 for the month of April 2010. The company withheld the following amounts from the employees' pay: federal income taxes, USD 4,100; state income taxes, USD 360; FICA taxes, USD 2,678; and medical insurance premiums, USD 940. This entry records the payroll:

2010

Salaries Expense (-SE)

35,000

April

Employees' Federal Income Taxes Payable (+L)

4,100

 

 Employees' State Income Taxes Payable (+L)

360

 

FICA Taxes Payable (+L)

2,678

 

Employees' Medical Insurance Premiums

940

 

Payable (+L)

 
 

Salaries Payable (+L)

26,922

 

To record the payroll for the month ending April 30.

 

 

All accounts credited in the entry are current liabilities and will be reported on the balance sheet if not paid prior to the preparation of financial statements. When these liabilities are paid, the employer debits each one and credits Cash.

Employers normally record payroll taxes at the same time as the payroll to which they relate. Assume the payroll taxes an employer pays for April are FICA taxes, USD 2,678; state unemployment taxes, USD 1,890; and federal unemployment taxes, USD 280. The entry to record these payroll taxes would be:

2010

       

April

30

Payroll Taxes Expense (-SE)

4,848

2,678

   

FICA Taxes Payable (+L)

 

1,890

   

State Unemployment Taxes Payable (+L)

 

280

   

Federal Unemployment Taxes Payable (+L)

   
   

To record employer's payroll taxes.

   


These amounts are in addition to the amounts withheld from employees' paychecks. The credit to FICA Taxes Payable is equal to the amount withheld from the employees' paychecks. The company can credit both its own and the employees' FICA taxes to the same liability account, since both are payable at the same time to the same agency. When these liabilities are paid, the employer debits each of the liability accounts and credits Cash.

 

An accounting perspective:
Uses of technology

One of the basic components in accounting software packages is the payroll module. As long as companies update this module each time rates, bases, or laws change, they can calculate withholdings, print payroll checks, and complete reporting forms for taxing agencies. In addition to calculating the employer's payroll taxes, this software maintains all accounting payroll records.

Managers of companies that have estimated liabilities know these liabilities exist but can only estimate the amount. The primary accounting problem is to estimate a reasonable liability as of the balance sheet date. An example of an estimated liability is product warranty payable.

Estimated product warranty payable When companies sell products such as computers, often they must guarantee against defects by placing a warranty on their products. When defects occur, the company is obligated to reimburse the customer or repair the product. For many products, companies can predict the number of defects based on experience. To provide for a proper matching of revenues and expenses, the accountant estimates the warranty expense resulting from an accounting period's sales. The debit is to Product Warranty Expense and the credit to Estimated Product Warranty Payable.

To illustrate, assume that a company sells personal computers and warrants all parts for one year. The average price per computer is USD 1,500, and the company sells 1,000 computers in 2010. The company expects 10 percent of the computers to develop defective parts within one year. By the end of 2010, customers have returned 40 computers sold that year for repairs, and the repairs on those 40 computers have been recorded. The estimated average cost of warranty repairs per defective computer is USD 150. To arrive at a reasonable estimate of product warranty expense, the accountant makes the following calculation:

Number of computers sold

1000

Percent estimated to develop defects

X 10%

Total estimated defective computers

100

Deduct computers returned as defective to date

40

Estimated additional number to become defective during warranty period

60

Estimated average warranty repair cost per compute:

X $ 150

Estimated product warranty payable

$9,000

 

The entry made at the end of the accounting period is:

Product Warranty Expense (-SE)

9,000

 

Estimated Product Warranty Payable (+L)

 

9,000

To record estimated product warranty expense.

   

 

When a customer returns one of the computers purchased in 2010 for repair work in 2008 (during the warranty period), the company debits the cost of the repairs to Estimated Product Warranty Payable. For instance, assume that Evan Holman returns his computer for repairs within the warranty period. The repair cost includes parts, USD 40, and labor, USD 160. The company makes the following entry:

Estimated Product Warranty Payable (-L)

200

Repair Parts Inventory (-A)

40

Wages Payable (+L)

160

To record replacement of parts under warranty.

 

 

An accounting perspective:

Business insight

Another estimated liability that is quite common relates to clean-up costs for industrial pollution. One company had the following note in its recent financial statements:

In the past, the Company treated hazardous waste at its chemical facilities. Testing of the ground waters in the areas of the treatment impoundments at these facilities disclosed the presence of certain contaminants. In compliance with environmental regulations, the Company developed a plan that will prevent further contamination, provide for remedial action to remove the present contaminants, and establish a monitoring program to monitor ground water conditions in the future. A similar plan has been developed for a site previously used as a metal pickling facility. Estimated future costs of USD 2,860,000 have been accrued in the accompanying financial statements...to complete the procedures required under these plans.

When liabilities are contingent, the company usually is not sure that the liability exists and is uncertain about the amount. FASB Statement No. 5 defines a contingency as "an existing condition, situation, or set of circumstances involving uncertainty as to gain or loss to an enterprise that will ultimately be resolved when one or more future events occur or fail to occur".

According to FASB Statement No. 5, if the liability is probable and the amount can be reasonably estimated, companies should record contingent liabilities accounts. However, since most contingent liabilities may not occur and the amount often cannot be reasonably estimated, the accountant usually does not record them in accounts. Instead, firms typically disclose these contingent liabilities in notes to financial statements.

Many contingent liabilities arise as the result of lawsuits. In fact, 469 of the 957 companies contacted in the AICPA's annual survey of accounting practices reported liabilities resulting from litigation.

The following two examples from annual reports are typical of the disclosures made in notes to the financial statements. Be aware that just because a suit is brought, the company being sued is not necessarily guilty. One company included the following note in its annual report to describe its contingent liability regarding various lawsuits against the company:


Contingent liabilities:

Various lawsuits and claims, including those involving ordinary routine litigation incidental to its business, to which the Company is a party, are pending, or have been asserted, against the Company. In addition, the Company was advised...that the United States Environmental Protection Agency had determined the existence of PCBs in a river and harbor near Sheboygan, Wisconsin, USA, and that the Company, as well as others, allegedly contributed to that contamination. It is not presently possible to determine with certainty what corrective action, if any, will be required, what portion of any costs thereof will be attributable to the Company, or whether all or any portion of such costs will be covered by insurance or will be recoverable from others. Although the outcome of these matters cannot be predicted with certainty, and some of them may be disposed of unfavorably to the Company, management has no reason to believe that their disposition will have a materially adverse effect on the consolidated financial position of the Company.

Another company dismissed an employee and included the following note to disclose the contingent liability resulting from the ensuing litigation:

 

Contingencies:

...A jury awarded USD 5.2 million to a former employee of the Company for an alleged breach of contract and wrongful termination of employment. The Company has appealed the judgment on the basis of errors in the judge's instructions to the jury and insufficiency of evidence to support the amount of the jury's award. The Company is vigorously pursuing the appeal.

The Company and its subsidiaries are also involved in various other litigation arising in the ordinary course of business.

Since it presently is not possible to determine the outcome of these matters, no provision has been made in the financial statements for their ultimate resolution. The resolution of the appeal of the jury award could have a significant effect on the Company's earnings in the year that a determination is made; however, in management's opinion, the final resolution of all legal matters will not have a material adverse effect on the Company's financial position.

Contingent liabilities may also arise from discounted notes receivable, income tax disputes, penalties that may be assessed because of some past action, and failure of another party to pay a debt that a company has guaranteed.

The remainder of this chapter discusses notes receivable and notes payable.

Business transactions often involve one party giving another party a note.

Notes receivable and notes payable

A note (also called a promissory note) is an unconditional written promise by a borrower (maker) to pay a definite sum of money to the lender (payee) on demand or on a specific date. On the balance sheet of the lender (payee), a note is a receivable; on the balance sheet of the borrower (maker), a note is a payable. Since the note is usually negotiable, the payee may transfer it to another party, who then receives payment from the maker. Look at the promissory note in Exhibit 2.

A customer may give a note to a business for an amount due on an account receivable or for the sale of a large item such as a refrigerator. Also, a business may give a note to a supplier in exchange for merchandise to sell or to a bank or an individual for a loan. Thus, a company may have notes receivable or notes payable arising from transactions with customers, suppliers, banks, or individuals.

Companies usually do not establish a subsidiary ledger for notes. Instead, they maintain a file of the actual notes receivable and copies of notes payable.

Most promissory notes have an explicit interest charge. Interest is the fee charged for use of money over a period. To the maker of the note, or borrower, interest is an expense; to the payee of the note, or lender, interest is a revenue. A borrower incurs interest expense; a lender earns interest revenue. For convenience, bankers sometimes calculate interest on a 360-day year; we calculate it on that basis in this text. (Some companies use a 365-day year).


Exhibit 2: Promissory note


The basic formula for computing interest is:

\text { Interest }=\text { Principal } \times \text { Rate } \times \text { Time }, \text { or } \quad \mathrm{I}=\mathrm{P} \times \mathrm{R} \times \mathrm{T}

 

Principal is the face value of the note. The rate is the stated interest rate on the note; interest rates are generally stated on an annual basis. Time, which is the amount of time the note is to run, can be either days or months.

To show how to calculate interest, assume a company borrowed USD 20,000 from a bank. The note has a principal (face value) of USD 20,000, an annual interest rate of 10 percent, and a life of 90 days. The interest calculation is:

\text { Interest=USD 20,000} \times 0.10 \times \frac{90}{360}

\text { Interest = USD 500}

Note that in this calculation we expressed the time period as a fraction of a 360 -day year because the interest rate is an annual rate.

The maturity date is the date on which a note becomes due and must be paid. Sometimes notes require monthly installments (or payments) but usually all of the principal and interest must be paid at the same time as in Exhibit 2. The wording in the note expresses the maturity date and determines when the note is to be paid. A note falling due on a Sunday or a holiday is due on the next business day. Examples of the maturity date wording are:

  • On demand. "On demand, I promise to pay..." When the maturity date is on demand, it is at the option of the holder and cannot be computed. The holder is the payee, or another person who legally acquired the note from the payee.
  • On a stated date. "On 2010 July 18, I promise to pay..." When the maturity date is designated, computing the maturity date is not necessary.
  • At the end of a stated period.

(a)"One year after date, I promise to pay..." When the maturity is expressed in years, the note matures on the same day of the same month as the date of the note in the year of maturity.

(b)"Four months after date, I promise to pay..." When the maturity is expressed in months, the note matures on the same date in the month of maturity. For example, one month from 2010 July 18, is 2010 August 18, and two months from 2010 July 18, is 2010 September 18. If a note is issued on the last day of a month and the month of maturity has fewer days than the month of issuance, the note matures on the last day of the month of maturity. A one-month note dated 2010 January 31, matures on 2010 February 28.

(c)“Ninety days after date, I promise to pay..." When the maturity is expressed in days, the exact number of days must be counted. The first day (date of origin) is omitted, and the last day (maturity date) is included in the count. For example, a 90-day note dated 2010 October 19, matures on 2008 January 17, as shown here:

Life of note (days)

 

90 days

Days remaining in October not counting date of origin of note:

   

Days to count in October (31-19)

12

 

Total days in November

30

 

Total Days in December

31

 

Maturity date in January

 

73

   

17 days

 

Sometimes a company receives a note when it sells high-priced merchandise; more often, a note results from the conversion of an overdue account receivable. When a customer does not pay an account receivable that is due, the company (creditor) may insist that the customer (debtor) gives a note in place of the account receivable. This action allows the customer more time to pay the balance due, and the company earns interest on the balance until paid. Also, the company may be able to sell the note to a bank or other financial institution.

To illustrate the conversion of an account receivable to a note, assume that Price

Company (maker) had purchased USD 18,000 of merchandise on August 1 from Cooper Company (payee) on account. The normal credit period has elapsed, and Price cannot pay the invoice. Cooper agrees to accept Price's USD 18,000, 15 percent, 90-day note dated September 1 to settle Price's open account. Assuming Price paid the note at maturity and both Cooper and Price have a December 31 year-end, the entries on the books of the payee and the maker are:

   

Cooper Company, Payee

   
   

Accounts Receivable - Price Company (+A)

   

Aug.

1

Sales (+SE)

18,000

 
   

To record sale of merchandise on account.

 

18,000

Sept.

1

Notes Receivable (+A)

18,000

 
   

Accounts Receivable - Price Company (-A)

 

18,000

   

To record exchange of a note from Price Company for open account.

   

Nov.

30

Cash (+A)

18,675

 
   

Notes Receivable (-A)

 

18,000

   

Interest Revenue ($18,000 X 0.15 X 90/360). (+SE)

675

 
   

To record receipt of Price Company note principal and interest.

   
   

Price Company, Maker

   
   

Purchase (+A)

   

Aug.

1

Accounts Payable - Cooper Company (+L)

18,000

 
   

To record purchase of merchandise on account.

 

18,000

Sept.

1

Accounts Payable - Cooper Company (-L)

18,000

 
   

Notes Payable (+L)

 

18,000

   

To record exchange of a note to Cooper Company for open account.

   

Nov.

30

Notes Payable (-L)

18,000

 
   

Interest Expense ($18,000 X 0.15 X 90/360). (-SE)

675

 
   

Cash (-A)

   
   

To record payment of note principal and interest.

 

18,675

 

The USD 18,675 paid by Price to Cooper is called the maturity value of the note. Maturity value is the amount that the maker must pay on a note on its maturity date; typically, it includes principal and accrued interest, if any.

Sometimes the maker of a note does not pay the note when it becomes due. The next section describes how to record a note not paid at maturity.

A dishonored note is a note that the maker failed to pay at maturity. Since the note has matured, the holder or payee removes the note from Notes Receivable and records the amount due in Accounts Receivable (or Dishonored Notes Receivable).

At the maturity date of a note, the maker should pay the principal plus interest. If the interest has not been accrued in the accounting records, the maker of a dishonored note should record interest expense for the life of the note by debiting Interest Expense and crediting Interest Payable. The payee should record the interest earned and remove the note from its Notes Receivable account. Thus, the payee of the note should debit Accounts Receivable for the maturity value of the note and credit Notes Receivable for the note's face value and Interest Revenue for the interest. After these entries have been posted, the full liability on the note - principal plus interest - is included in the records of both parties. Interest continues to accrue on the note until it is paid, replaced by a new note, or written off as uncollectible. To illustrate, assume that Price did not pay the note at maturity. The entries on each party's books are:

 

Cooper Company, Payee

   

Nov.

30

Accounts Receivable - Price Company (+A)

18,675

 
   

Notes Receivable (-A)

 

18,000

   

Interest Revenue (+SE)

 

675

To record dishonor of Price Company note.

   

Price Company, Maker

   

Nov.

30

Interest Expense (-SE)

675

 
   

Interest Payable (+L)

 

675

 

When unable to pay a note at maturity, sometimes the maker pays the interest on the original note or includes the interest in the face value of a new note that replaces the old note. Both parties account for the new note in the same manner as the old note. However, if it later becomes clear that the maker of a dishonored note will never pay, the payee writes off the account with a debit to Uncollectible Accounts Expense (or to an account with a title such as Loss on Dishonored Notes) and a credit to Accounts Receivable. The debit should be to the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts if the payee made an annual provision for uncollectible notes receivable.

Assume that Price Company pays the interest at the maturity date and issues a new 15 percent, 90-day note for USD 18,000. The entries on both sets of books would be:

Cooper Company, Payee

Price Company, Maker

Cash (+A)

675

 

Interest Expense (-SE)

675

 

Interest Revenue(+SE)

 

675

Cash (-A)

 

675

To record the receipt of interest on Price Company note.

   

To record the payment of interest on note to Cooper Company.

   

(Optional entry)

18,000

 

(Optional entry)

18,000

 

Notes Receivable (+A)

 

18,000

Notes Payable (-L)

 

18,000

Notes Receivable (-A)

   

Notes Payable (+L )

   

To replace old 15%, 90-day note from Price Company with new 15%, 90-day note.

   

To replace old 15%, 90-day note to Cooper Company with new 15%, 90-day note.

   

 

Although the second entry on each set of books has no effect on the existing account balances, it indicates that the old note was renewed (or replaced). Both parties substitute the new note, or a copy, for the old note in a file of notes.

Now assume that Price Company does not pay the interest at the maturity date but instead includes the interest in the face value of the new note. The entries on both sets of books would be:

 

Cooper Company, Payee

Price Company, Maker

Notes Receivable (+A)

18,675

 

Interest Expense (-SE)

675

 

Interest Revenue (+S E)

 

675

Notes Payable (-L)

18,000

 

Notes Receivable (-A)

   

Notes Payable (+L)

 

18,675

To record the replacement of the old Price Company $ 18,000, 15%, 90 - day note with a new $18,675, 15%, 90-day note.

   

To record the replacement of the old $ 18,000, 15%, 90-day note to Cooper Company with a new $18,675, 15%, 90-day note.

   

 

On an interest-bearing note, even though interest accrues, or accumulates, on a dayto-day basis, usually both parties record it only at the note's maturity date. If the note is outstanding at the end of an accounting period, however, the time period of the interest overlaps the end of the accounting period and requires an adjusting entry at the end of the accounting period. Both the payee and maker of the note must make an adjusting entry to record the accrued interest and report the proper assets and revenues for the payee and the proper liabilities and expenses for the maker. Failure to record accrued interest understates the payee's assets and revenues by the amount of the interest earned but not collected and understates the maker's expenses and liabilities by the interest expense incurred but not yet paid.

Payee's books To illustrate how to record accrued interest on the payee's books, assume that the payee, Cooper Company, has a fiscal year ending on October 31 instead of December 31. On October 31, Cooper would make the following adjusting entry relating to the Price Company note:

Oct.

31

Interest Receivable (+A)

450

 
   

Interest Revenue ($18,000 X 0.15 X 60/360) (+SE)

 

450

   

To record interest earned on Price Company note for the period September 1 through October 31.

 

The Interest Receivable account shows the interest earned but not yet collected. Interest receivable is a current asset in the balance sheet because the interest will be collected in 30 days. The interest revenue appears in the income statement. When Price pays the note on November 30, Cooper makes the following entry to record the collection of the note's principal and interest:

                           

Nov.

30

Cash (+A)

18,675

 
   

Notes Receivable (-A)

 

18,000

   

Interest Receivable (-A)

 

450

   

Interest Revenue (+SE)

 

225

   

To record collection of Price Company note and interest.

   

 

Note that the entry credits the Interest Receivable account for the USD 450 interest accrued from September 1 through October 31, which was debited to the account in the previous entry, and credits Interest Revenue for the USD 225 interest earned in November.

Maker's books Assume Price Company's accounting year also ends on October 31 instead of December 31. Price's accounting records would be incomplete unless the company makes an adjusting entry to record the liability owed for the accrued interest on the note it gave to Cooper Company. The required entry is:

Oct.

31

Interest Expense ($18,000 X 0.15 X 60/360) (-SE)

450

 
   

Interest Payable (+L)

 

450

   

To record accrued interest on note to Cooper Company for the period September 1 through October 31.

 

                          

 

The Interest Payable account, which shows the interest expense incurred but not yet paid, is a current liability in the balance sheet because the interest will be paid in 30 days. Interest expense appears in the income statement. When the note is paid, Price makes the following entry:

Nov.

30

Notes Payable (-L)

18,000

 
   

Interest Payable (-L)

450

 
   

Interest Expense (-SE)

225

 
   

Cash (-A)

 

18,675

   

To record payment of principal and interest on note to Cooper Company.

   

 

In this illustration, Cooper's financial position made it possible for the company to carry the Price note to the maturity date. Alternatively, Cooper could have sold, or discounted, the note to receive the proceeds before the maturity date. This topic is reserved for a more advanced text.

Short-term financing through notes payable

A company sometimes needs short-term financing. This situation may occur when (1) the company's cash receipts are delayed because of lenient credit terms granted customers, or (2) the company needs cash to finance the buildup of seasonal inventories, such as before Christmas. To secure short-term financing, companies issue interest-bearing or non interest-bearing notes.

Interest-bearing notes To receive short-term financing, a company may issue an interest-bearing note to a bank. An interest-bearing note specifies the interest rate charged on the principal borrowed. The company receives from the bank the principal borrowed; when the note matures, the company pays the bank the principal plus the interest.

Accounting for an interest-bearing note is simple. For example, assume the company's accounting year ends on December 31. Needham Company issued a USD 10,000, 90-day, 9 percent note on 2009 December 1. The following entries would record the loan, the accrual of interest on 2009 December 31 and its payment on 2010 March 1:

2009

1

Cash (+A)

10,000

 

Dec.

 

Notes Payable (+L)

 

10,000

   

To record 90-day bank loan.

   
 

31

Interest Expense (-SE

75

 
   

Interest Payable (+L)

 

75

   

To record accrued interest on a note payable at year-end ($10,000 X 0.09 X 30/360).

   

2010

 

Notes Payable (-L)

10,000

 

Mar.

1

Interest Expense ($10,000 X 0.09 X 60/360) (-SE)

150

 
   

Interest Payable (-L)

75

 
   

Cash (-A)

 

10,225

   

To record principal and interest paid on bank loan.

   

 

Non interest-bearing notes (discounting notes payable) A company may also issue a non interest-bearing note to receive short-term financing from a bank. A non interest-bearing note does not have a stated interest rate applied to the face value of the note. Instead, the note is drawn for a maturity amount less a bank discount; the borrower receives the proceeds. A bank discount is the difference between the maturity value of the note and the cash proceeds given to the borrower. The cash proceeds are equal to the maturity amount of a note less the bank discount. This entire process is called discounting a note payable. The purpose of this process is to introduce interest into what appears to be a non interest-bearing note. The meaning of discounting here is to deduct interest in advance.

Because interest is related to time, the bank discount is not interest on the date the loan is made; however, it becomes interest expense to the company and interest revenue to the bank as time passes. To illustrate, assume that on 2009 December 1, Needham Company presented its USD 10,000, 90-day, non interest-bearing note to the bank, which discounted the note at 9 percent. The discount is USD 225 (USD 10,000 X 0.09 X 90/360), and the proceeds to Needham are USD 9,775. The entry required on the date of the note's issue is:

2009

       

Dec.

1

Cash (+A)

9,775

 
   

Discount on Notes Payable (-L)

225

 
   

Notes Payable (+L)

   
   

Issued a 90-day note to bank.

 

10,000

 

Needham credits Notes Payable for the face value of the note. Discount on notes payable is a contra account used to reduce Notes Payable from face value to the net amount of the debt. The balance in the Discount on Notes Payable account appears on the balance sheet as a deduction from the balance in the Notes Payable account.

Over time, the discount becomes interest expense. If Needham paid the note before the end of the fiscal year, it would charge the entire USD 225 discount to Interest Expense and credit Discount on Notes Payable. However, if Needham's fiscal year ended on December 31, an adjusting entry would be required as follows:

2009

       

Dec.

31

Interest Expense (-SE)

75

 
   

Discount on Notes Payable (+L)

 

75

   

To record accrued interest on note payable at year-end.

   

 

This entry records the interest expense incurred by Needham for the 30 days the note has been outstanding. The expense can be calculated as USD 10,000 X 0.09 X 30/360, or 30/90 X USD 225. Notice that for entries involving discounted notes payable, no separate Interest Payable account is needed. The Notes Payable account already contains the total liability that will be paid at maturity, USD 10,000. From the date the proceeds are given to the borrower to the maturity date, the liability grows by reducing the balance in the Discount on Notes Payable contra account. Thus, the current liability section of the 2009 December 31, balance sheet would show:

Current Liabilities:

   

Notes payable

$10,000

 

Less: Discount on notes payable

150

$9,850

 

When the note is paid at maturity, the entry is:

2010

       

Mar.

1

Notes Payable (-L)

10,000

 
   

Interest Expense (-SE)

150

 
   

Cash (-A)

 

10,000

   

Discount on Notes Payable (+L)

 

150

   

To record note payment and interest expense.

   

 

The T-accounts for Discount on Notes Payable and for Interest Expense appear as follows:

Discount on Notes Payable

     

Interest Expense

   

2009

 

2009

   

2009

   

2009

Dec. 1

225

Dec. 31

 

75

Dec. 31

75

 

Dec. 31 To close 75

Dec. 31

Balance 150

2010

   

2010

     
   

Mar. 1

 

150

Mar. 1

150

   

 

In Exhibit 3, we compare the journal entries for interest-bearing notes and noninterest-bearing notes used by Needham Company.

   

Interest-Bearing Notes

       

Non Interest-Bearing Notes

   

2009

       

2009

       

Dec.

1

Cash (+A)

10,000

 

Dec.

1

Cash (+A)

9,775

 
   

Notes Payable (+L)

 

10,000

   

Discount on Notes Payable (-L)

225

 
   

To record 90-day bank loan.

       

Notes Payable (+L)

 

10,000

             

To record 90-day bank loan.

   
 

31

Interest Expense (-SE)

75

   

31

Interest Expense (-SE)

75

 
   

Interest Payable (-L)

 

75

   

Discount on Notes Payable (+L)

 

75

   

To record accrued interest on a note payable at year-end.

       

To record accrued interest on a note payable at year-end.

   

2010

       

2010

       

Mar.

1

Notes Payable (-L)

10,000

 

Mar.

1

Notes Payable (-L)

10,000

 
   

Interest Expense (-SE)

150

     

Interest Expense (-SE)

150

 
   

Interest Payable (-L)

75

     

Cash (-A)

 

10,000

   

Cash (-A)

 

10,225

   

Discount on Notes Payable (+L)

 

150

   

To record note principal and

       

To record note principal and

   


Exhibit 3: Comparison between interest-bearing notes and noninterest-bearing notes

Analyzing and using the financial results - Accounts receivable turnover

Accounts receivable turnover is the number of times per year that the average amount of accounts receivable is collected. To calculate this ratio divide net credit sales, or net sales, by the average net accounts receivable (accounts receivable after deducting the allowance for uncollectible accounts):

\text {
    Accounts receivable turnover }=\frac{\text { Net credit sales }(\text { net
    sales })}{\text { Average net accounts receivable }}

Ideally, average net accounts receivable should represent weekly or monthly averages; often, however, beginning and end-of-year averages are the only amounts available to users outside the company. Although analysts should use net credit sales, frequently net credit sales are not known to those outside the company. Instead, they use net sales in the numerator.

Generally, the faster firms collect accounts receivable, the better. A company with a high accounts receivable turnover ties up a smaller proportion of its funds in accounts receivable than a company with a low turnover. Both the company's credit terms and collection policies affect turnover. For instance, a company with credit terms of 2/10, n/30 would expect a higher turnover than a company with terms of n/60. Also, a company that aggressively pursues overdue accounts receivable has a higher turnover of accounts receivable than one that does not.

For example, we calculated these accounts receivable turnovers for the following hypothetical companies:

 

 

Accounts Receivable

 

Net Sales (millions)

Average Net

Turnover

Abercrombie & Fitch

$ 1,238

$ 14

88.43

The Limited, Inc.

10,105

1,012

10

 

We calculate the number of days' sales in accounts receivable (also called the average collection period for accounts receivable) as follows:

\text {
    Number of days ' sales per accounts receivable }=\frac{\text { Number of days
    per a year }(365)}{\text { Accounts receivable turnover }}

This ratio measures the average liquidity of accounts receivable and gives an indication of their quality. The faster a firm collects receivables, the more liquid (the closer to being cash) they are and the higher their quality. The longer accounts receivable remain outstanding, the greater the probability they never will be collected. As the time period increases, so does the probability that customers will declare bankruptcy or go out of business.

Based on 365 days, we calculated the number of days' sales for each of these hypothetical companies:

 

Accounts Receivable

Company

Turnover

Number of Day's Sales in

Abercrombie & Fitch

88.43

4.1

The Limited, Inc.

10

36.5

 

These companies have collection periods ranging from 4.1 to 36.5 days. Assuming credit terms of 2/10, n/30, one would expect the average collection period to be under 30 days. If customers do not pay within 10 days and take the discount offered, they incur an annual interest rate of 36.5 percent on these funds. (They lose a 2 percent discount and get to use the funds another 20 days, which is equivalent to an annual rate of 36.5 percent.)

Having studied receivables and payables in this chapter, you will study plant assets in the next chapter. These long-term assets include land and depreciable assets such as buildings, machinery, and equipment.


Understanding the learning objectives

• Companies use two methods to account for uncollectible accounts receivable: the allowance method, which provides in advance for uncollectible accounts; and the direct write-off method, which recognizes uncollectible accounts as an expense when judged uncollectible. The allowance method is the preferred method and is the only method discussed and illustrated in this text.

• The two basic methods for estimating uncollectible accounts under the allowance method are the percentage-of-sales method and the percentage-ofreceivables method.

• The percentage-of-sales method focuses attention on the income statement and the relationship of uncollectible accounts to sales. The debit to Uncollectible Accounts Expense is a certain percent of credit sales or total net sales.

• The percentage-of-receivables method focuses attention on the balance sheet and the relationship of the allowance for uncollectible accounts to accounts receivable. The credit to the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts is the amount necessary to bring that account up to a certain percentage of the Accounts Receivable balance. Either one overall percentage or an aging schedule may be used.

• Credit cards are charge cards used by customers to charge purchases of goods and services. These cards are of two types - nonbank credit cards (such as American Express) and bank credit cards (such as VISA).

• The sale is recorded at the gross amount of the sale, and the cash or receivable is recorded at the net amount the company will receive.

• Liabilities result from some past transaction and are obligations to pay cash, provide services, or deliver goods at some time in the future.

• Current liabilities are obligations that (1) are payable within one year or one operating cycle, whichever is longer, or (2) will be paid out of current assets or create other current liabilities.

• Long-term liabilities are obligations that do not qualify as current liabilities.

• Clearly determinable liabilities are those for which the existence of the liability and its amount are certain. An example is accounts payable.

• Estimated liabilities are those for which the existence of the liability is certain, but its amount can only be estimated. An example is estimated product warranty payable.

• Contingent liabilities are those for which the existence, and usually the amount, are uncertain because these liabilities depend (or are contingent) on some future event occurring or not occurring. An example is a liability arising from a lawsuit.

• A promissory note is an unconditional written promise by a borrower (maker) to pay the lender (payee) or someone else who legally acquired the note a certain sum of money on demand or at a definite time.

• Interest is the fee charged for the use of money through time.

Interest=Principal×Rate of interest×Time.

• Companies sometimes need short-term financing. Short-term financing may be secured by issuing interest-bearing notes or by issuing non interest-bearing notes.

• An interest-bearing note specifies the interest rate that will be charged on the principal borrowed.

• A non interest-bearing note does not have a stated interest rate applied to the face value of the note.

• Calculate accounts receivable turnover by dividing net credit sales, or net sales, by average net accounts receivable.

• Calculate the number of days' sales in accounts receivable (or average collection period) by dividing the number of days in the year by the accounts receivable turnover.

• Together, these ratios show the liquidity of accounts receivable and give some indication of their quality. Generally, the higher the accounts receivable turnover, the better; and the shorter the average collection period, the better.


Key terms

Accounts receivable turnover Net credit sales (or net sales) divided by average net accounts receivable.

Aging schedule A means of classifying accounts receivable according to their age; used to determine the necessary balance in an Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts. A different uncollectibility percentage rate is used for each age category.

Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts A contra-asset account to the Accounts Receivable account; it reduces accounts receivable to their net realizable value. Also called Allowance for Doubtful Accounts or Allowance for Bad Debts.

Bad debts expense See Uncollectible accounts expense.

Bank discount The difference between the maturity value of a note and the actual amount - the note's proceeds - given to the borrower.

Cash proceeds The maturity amount of a note less the bank discount.

Clearly determinable liabilities Liabilities whose existence and amount are certain. Examples include accounts payable, notes payable, interest payable, unearned delivery fees, wages payable, sales tax payable, federal excise tax payable, current portions of long-term debt, and various payroll liabilities.

Contingent liabilities Liabilities whose existence is uncertain. Their amount is also usually uncertain. Both their existence and amount depend on some future event that may or may not occur. Examples include liabilities arising from lawsuits, discounted notes receivable, income tax disputes, penalties that may be assessed because of some past action, and failure of another party to pay a debt that a company has guaranteed.

Credit Card Expense account Used to record credit card agency's service charges for services rendered in processing credit card sales.

Credit cards Nonbank charge cards (e.g. American Express) and bank charge cards (e.g. VISA and MasterCard) that customers use to charge their purchases of goods and services.

Current liabilities Obligations that (1) are payable within one year or one operating cycle, whichever is longer, or (2) will be paid out of current assets or result in the creation of other current liabilities.

Discount on Notes Payable A contra account used to reduce Notes Payable from face value to the net amount of the debt.

Discounting a note payable The act of borrowing on a non interest-bearing note drawn for a maturity amount, from which a bank discount is deducted, and the proceeds are given to the borrower.

Dishonored note A note that the maker failed to pay at maturity.

Estimated liabilities Liabilities whose existence is certain, but whose amount can only be estimated. An example is estimated product warranty payable. Interest The fee charged for use of money over a period of time (I = P X R X T).

Interest Payable account An account showing the interest expense incurred but not yet paid; reported as a current liability in the balance sheet.

Interest Receivable account An account showing the interest earned but not yet collected; reported as a current asset in the balance sheet.

Liabilities Obligations that result from some past transaction and are obligations to pay cash, perform services, or deliver goods at some time in the future.

Long-term liabilities Obligations that do not qualify as current liabilities.

Maker (of a note) The party who prepares a note and is responsible for paying the note at maturity.

Maturity date The date on which a note becomes due and must be paid. Maturity value The amount that the maker must pay on the note on its maturity date.

Net realizable value The amount the company expects to collect from accounts receivable.

Number of days' sales in accounts receivable The number of days in a year (365) divided by the accounts receivable turnover.

Operating cycle The time it takes to start with cash, buy necessary items to produce revenues (such as materials, supplies, labor, and/or finished goods), sell goods or services, and receive cash by collecting the resulting receivables. Payable Any sum of money due to be paid by a company to any party for any reason.

Payee (of a note) The party who receives a note and will be paid cash at maturity.

Percentage-of-receivables method A method for determining the desired size of the Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts by basing the calculation on the Accounts Receivable balance at the end of the period.

Principal (of a note) The face value of a note.

Promissory note An unconditional written promise by a borrower (maker) to pay a definite sum of money to the lender (payee) on demand or at a specific date.

Rate (of a note) The stated interest rate on the note.

Receivable Any sum of money due to be paid to a company from any party for any reason.

Time (of a note) The amount of time the note is to run; can be expressed in days, months, or years.

Trade receivables Amounts customers owe a company for goods sold or services rendered on account. Also called accounts receivable or trade accounts receivable.

Uncollectible accounts expense An operating expense that a business incurs when it sells on credit; also called doubtful accounts expense or bad debts expense.