Industry terms and knowledge

Submitted by sylvia.wong@up… on Thu, 12/08/2022 - 17:53

This qualification, FNS40222 Certificate IV in Accounting and Bookkeeping, reflects the job roles of workers in the accounting industry, including BAS Agents and contract bookkeepers; and of those employees performing bookkeeping tasks for organisations in a range of industries.

It includes preparing and lodging business and instalment activity statements and providing advice or dealing with the Commissioner on behalf of a taxpayer concerning activity statements. Individuals in these roles apply theoretical and specialist knowledge and skills to work autonomously and exercise judgement in completing routine and non-routine activities.

The purpose of this module is to introduce key terms, concepts, and legislation.

Sub Topics

Accounting Basics Explained through a story

Accounting is the process of recording the financial transactions of a business. It allows businesses to keep track of how much they are spending and their return-on-investment (ROI).

Accountants and Bookkeepers play vital roles in running a business because they help track income and expenses, ensure statutory compliance, and provide investors, management, and government with financial information. This financial information is used when making business decisions like planning a budget or making future projections about the business.

While both accountants and bookkeepers manage finances for businesses, they each support the business in different ways and various financial processes. The table below outlines the main differences between bookkeepers and accountants.

  Bookkeeper Accountant
Credentials

No formal education is required. However, there are basic skills you need to have to succeed:

  • Organisational skills
  • Communication skills
  • Attention to detail
  • Analytical skills

Often these skills are acquired through completing a Certificate IV in Accounting and Bookkeeping qualification.

Persons providing a business activity statement (BAS) service for a fee or other reward must be registered by the Tax Practitioners Board (TPB). This qualification is currently cited as meeting the TPB education requirements for registration.

Formal qualification - bachelor's degree in accounting or finance.
Functions

Bookkeepers record and manage the daily financial transactions of a business. This includes:

  • Recording daily financial transactions like sales and payment
  • Maintaining the general ledger, general ledger accounts, and journals
  • Creating financial reports
  • Collecting payments from customers
  • Pay employees, suppliers, and creditors
  • Manage inventory and cash flow.

Accountants provide financial analysis on data that has been entered by a bookkeeper. This includes:

  • Analysing the data in the bookkeeper's financial reports
  • Acting as a consultant in decision-making
  • Making financial forecasts and recommending strategies
  • Preparing financial statements and lodging tax returns with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).
Documentation prepared

Bookkeepers prepare:

  • Balance Sheet
  • Profit & Loss Statement (also known as the Income Statement)

Accountants prepare:

  • Financial Statements
Reporting Obligations

Bookkeepers lodge:

  • Business Activity Statements (BAS)
  • Instalment Activity Statement (IAS)
  • Super guarantee (SG) contributions
  • Payroll Tax Reports

Accountants lodge:

  • Income Tax Returns
Professional Certification

Bookkeepers can become members of:

  • The Institute of Certified Bookkeepers (ICB)
  • Australian Bookkeepers Network (ABN)

Accountants can become members of

  • Certified Practising Accountant (CPA)
  • Chartered Accountants (CA)
Group of business professionals discussing a project

Accounting Terminology for Corporation Accounting

Accounting is often referred to as the language of business. Like any language, you may need to understand a lot of terminologies as you progress through the modules. Below is a list of accounting terms and definitions that we have compiled to assist you.

  • Account: An account is a unit or record in an accounting system to track the financial activities of an asset, revenue, expense, liability, or equity.
  • Accounts Payable: refers to the amount due to vendors or suppliers for goods or services received that have not yet been paid for or purchased on credit without a promissory note.
  • Accounts Receivable: It refers to the amount owed by a company from the company providing goods and/or services on credit. The term trade receivable is also used in place of accounts receivable.
  • Accrual: The recognition of an expense or revenue that has occurred but has not yet been recorded.1
  • Accrual accounting: Accrual accounting is an accounting method where revenue or expenses are recorded when a transaction occurs rather than when payment is received or made. The method follows the matching principle, which states that revenues and expenses should be recognised in the same period. The key principles of accrual accounting are: Revenue, Expense, and Matching principles.
  • Assets: These are resources owned by a company that has economic value and is used to generate profit.
  • Bad debt: A bad debt is defined as a debt that cannot be recovered.
  • Bad debt expense: The entry made for uncollectible or non-recoverable debts. This happens when a customer failed to pay the company for the rendered services or delivered products on credit.
  • Balance Day Adjustments: Balance day adjustments are done at the end of the accounting period and are used to ensure that the organisation's revenue and expenses align with the correct accounting period. It involves aligning recorded costs, aligning recorded revenues, and reversing entries with the appropriate accounting period.
Knowing what you don’t know is more useful than being brilliant.
Charlie Munger (Businessman and author. Chairman of the Daily Journal and Director of Costco Wholesale Coorporation)
  • Balance Sheet or Statement of Financial Position: The balance sheet or statement of financial position reports the assets, liabilities, and owner's (stockholders') equity. It provides a summary statement of the firm's financial position at a given point in time. It reveals the worth of a company, how that worth is made up, its assets (what the company owns and each asset's current book value) and its liabilities (how the assets were funded).
  • Bank reconciliation: Bank reconciliation is the process of comparing the amounts in the Cash account in the general ledger to the amounts appearing on the bank statement. The objective is to be certain that there is consistency between the amounts and that the company's amounts are accurate and complete.
  • Bank statement: A bank statement is a document (also known as an account statement) that is typically sent by the bank to the account holder every month, summarising all the transactions of an account during the month. Bank statements contain bank account information, such as account numbers and a detailed list of deposits and withdrawals.
  • Business Activity Statement: A Business Activity Statement (BAS) is a type of report used to assess the business' tax liability depending on the type of business. BASs are issued by the ATO either monthly or quarterly. A form needs to be lodged with the ATO and payment made to the ATO by the due dates.
  • Cash accounting: Cash accounting is an accounting method where payment receipts are recorded during the period in which they are received, and expenses are recorded in the period in which they are actually paid. It recognises transactions only when payment is exchanged.
  • Cash Flow Statement: The statement of cash flow reports the sources and uses of cash by operating activities, investing activities, financing activities, and certain supplemental information for the period specified in the heading of the statement. It summarises the amount of cash or cash equivalents entering and leaving a company.
  • Chart of accounts: A list of accounts used to classify and summarise the transactions of a business.
  • Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): total cost of inventory sold in a given period.
  • Cost principle: The cost principle states that amounts in the accounting system should be quantified or measured by using historical costs.
  • Credit: A credit is an entry made on the right side of an account. It either increases equity, liability, or revenue accounts or decreases an asset or expense account. Record the corresponding credit for the purchase of a new computer by crediting your expense account.
  • Closing procedures: This is the phase in the accounting cycle when the balances of the temporary accounts are transferred to the capital account. Therefore, the balance of the owner's capital account includes on a cumulative basis the net results of all revenue, expense, and drawings transactions.
  • Debit: A debit is an entry made on the left side of an account. It either increases an asset or expense account or decreases equity, liability, or revenue accounts. For example, you would debit the purchase of a new computer by entering the asset gained on the left side of your asset account.
  • Deferred Revenue: These are transactions ordinarily recorded by debiting cash and crediting a liability account for the unearned revenue when a business receives fees for services before the actual service is rendered. It shows the obligation to perform future services.
Accounting is the language of business.
Warren Buffet (Chairman & CEO of Berkshire Hathaway)
  • Depreciation Expense: This is an expense that is listed on the Income Statement, while Accumulated Depreciation may be a negative asset. The accounting entry for depreciation involves a journal entry that creates a depreciation expense and an accumulated depreciation account.
  • Depreciation Schedule: A depreciation schedule should show the book value at the beginning of each year, the rate of depreciation applied (if the method requires it), the depreciation expense, the accumulated depreciation, and the book value at the end of each year.
  • Depreciation Straight Line: This is a method of depreciation used to determine the salvage value (this is the value of an asset at the end of its life) of a fixed asset, subtract that from the original cost of the asset and expense the remaining value over the useful life of the asset equally each year.
  • Depreciation Reducing Balance Method: This is a method of depreciation used to capture a higher level of depreciation in the early years of an asset's life, with lower values in later years. This method of depreciation is calculated simply by multiplying the book value at the beginning of the year by a specific depreciation rate.
  • Double Entry Bookkeeping: Double-entry bookkeeping or double-entry accounting means that every transaction will involve at least two accounts (a debit to one account and a credit to another) to keep a company's accounts balanced.
  • Doubtful debt: A doubtful debt is a debt that a business or individual might be able to collect. A doubtful debt may, at some point in the future, become a bad debt.
  • Equity: Also known as owner's capital or shareholder equity, it refers to the remaining value of an owner's interest in a company after all liabilities have been deducted. It is referred to as "shareholders' equity" (for corporations) or "owner's equity" (for sole proprietorships).
  • Expense: Expense in accounting is the money spent or costs incurred by a business in its effort to generate revenues.
  • Financial statements: Written records that summarise a business's operations, financial position, and cash flow over an accounting cycle.
  • Fixed Asset: This is any form of asset that cannot be easily turned into cash. They are referred to as property, furniture and fittings, plant, and equipment, as these are the types of assets that are most commonly fixed.
  • Fixed Asset Register: This is a system used to compile and hold details of each fixed asset that a business owns.
  • General Ledger: Referred to as "the books", it contains all the organised accounts (chart of accounts) of the business transactions. It provides a permanent record of all the transactions throughout the life of the business. The five essential accounting items that a general ledger tracks are: Assets; Liabilities; Owner's Capital (Equity); Revenue, and Expenses.
  • Going concern assumption: Going concern assumption, also known as continuity assumption, states that accounting systems assume that a business will continue to operate.
  • Gross Profit: Net Sales – Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit
  • Income statement: The income statement, also referred to as a 'profit and loss statement,' 'statement of incomes and losses,' or 'report of earnings,' shows the income the business has earned in the accounting period, the costs or expenses that were incurred by the business during the period, and the net profit.
  • Interim reports: Interim reports are reports of a financial period shorter than a fiscal year. These reports are usually produced during three (3) quarters of each financial year. These reports include the following financial statements: Balance sheet, Income statement, and statement of cash flows.
Accounting for the most part, remains a legalistic and traditional practice, almost immune to self-criticism by scientific methods.
Kenneth E Boulding (Co-founder of General System Theory, Businessman and Author)
  • Inventory: This is done at the end of the month to undertake a closing of an account. The account is closed by physically making the values in the account match the physical count of products left. It also acts to close the purchases account, and the difference between the two becomes the cost of goods sold.
  • Invoice: An invoice is a document sent by the seller to the customer that requests payment for products or services. It lists what goods or services were provided, how much they cost, and which forms of payment the seller accepts.
  • Journal: The journal is a record that keeps the accounting transactions in the order of occurrence (listed or ordered by date). It is used to record and summarise the transactions that occur in a business.
  • Journal Entry: The journal entry is when an entry is made to the appropriate journal.
  • Ledger: The ledger is the record that keeps accounting transactions by accounts.
  • Liability or Liability Account: A liability account is a general ledger account that records the company's obligations, debt, customer deposits, customer prepayments, deferred income, and others. This account is the result of past transactions.
  • Net profit: It is the amount gained by the business by computing the difference between the costs and income in a given period.
  • Objectivity principle: The objectivity principle states that accounting measurements and accounting reports should use objective, factual and verifiable data.
  • Opening Entries: This refers to recording the assets, liabilities, and equity to start the accounting system of a business – to 'open' its accounting records (a once-only entry).
  • Petty cash: Petty cash or a petty cash fund is a small amount of money available for paying small expenses (incidentals) that occurs during the day-to-day running of a business. Petty cash is also the title of the general ledger current asset account that reports the amount of the company's petty cash.
  • Profit and Loss Statement: The profit and loss statement shows whether the business is making a profit or a loss. This statement may be kept for any period of time. For example, at start-up, they may be produced monthly. Annual ones are produced at the end of the year for the preparation of your income tax. It only shows revenues, expenses, gains, and losses. It will not display money received, or money paid out in an accrual-based system.
  • Proof of lodgement: A deposit slip or lodgement slip that is filled out and stamped whenever cash or cheques are deposited into a bank account. Another form of proof of lodgement is the receipts for online banking transactions. These items help with the bank reconciliation process as they provide evidence that money was indeed deposited and should be showing on the bank statement.
  • Reconciliation: In an accounting process, reconciliation is comparing two sets of records to check that figures are correct and confirms that accounts in the general ledger are consistent, accurate, and complete.
  • Revenue: This refers to the amount a company receives from selling goods and/or providing services to customers.
  • Revenue, Expense, and Drawings Accounts: These are temporary accounts that accumulate data related to a specific accounting year and are used to facilitate the preparation of the income statement and provide additional information.
  • Separate entity assumption: Separate entity assumptions state that a business entity, like a sole proprietorship, is a separate entity - a separate thing from its business owner.
  • Source Documents: The source documents used for creating your general ledger are the various documents that exist in your organisation used for creating journals (e.g. invoices, bank statements).
There’s no business like show business, but there are several businesses like accounting.
- David Letterman (Television host, author, comedian, writer and producer)
  • Subsidiary ledgers or Sub ledgers: These are ledgers used for maintaining individual records of specific aspects of the business, which are summarised in the general ledger. It records individual transactions from the journals.
  • Trial balance: This is a worksheet where all of the general ledger accounts with their balance as either debit or credit are listed. The trial balance is used to determine whether there are any gross errors in the books. It is used as a checking mechanism because the total of all debits must equal the balance of all credits.
  • Unit-of-measure assumption: Under the unit-of-measure assumption, it is assumed that a business's domestic currency is the appropriate measure for the business to use in its accounting.
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