Accounting
IMPORTANT POINTS TO REMEMBER
1. Types of Accounts and Journalizing Rules
• Traditional Approach
Type of Account Debit Credit
Personal The Receiver The Giver
Real What Comes In What Goes Out
Nominal All Expenses/Losses All Incomes/Profits
• Modern Approach
Type of Account Debit Credit
Asset Increase Decrease
Liability Decrease Increase
Capital Decrease Increase
Type of Account Debit Credit
Income/Profit Decrease Increase
Expense/Loss Increase Decrease
,2. Method of Recording a Journal Entry
• Format:
Debit Credit
Date Particulars
(₹) (₹)
dd/mm/yyyy Dr. Account Name XXX
To Cr. Account Name XXX
(Narration: Explanation of the
transaction)
• Example: Purchase of Machinery for ₹50,000 in Cash
Date Particulars Debit (₹) Credit (₹)
01/02/2024 Machinery A/c Dr. 50,000
To Cash A/c 50,000
(Being machinery purchased in cash)
3. Accounting Equations Assets = Liabilities + Capital
4. Ledger Balancing Steps
1. Total Debit and Credit columns.
2. If Debit > Credit, difference (debit balance) recorded on Credit side as
'By Balance c/d'.
3. If Credit > Debit, difference (credit balance) recorded on Debit side as
'To Balance c/d'.
4. Totals written, double lines drawn.
5. Bring forward balance in next period.
, Types of Ledger Accounts
1. Asset Accounts: Always debit balance; ceases when nil.
2. Liability Accounts: Always credit balance; ceases when nil.
3. Nominal Accounts: Not balanced, closed to Trading/Profit & Loss
accounts.
4. Personal Accounts:
- Debit balance: Debtor/Receivable
- Credit balance: Creditor/Payable
- Nil balance: No receivable/payable.
5. Methods of Preparing Trial Balance
(i) Totals Method: Record total debits and credits from each ledger
account. Totals must match to confirm accuracy.
(ii) Balance Method: Record only the ending balances (debit or credit).
Simplifies by listing only accounts with balances.
(iii) Compound Method : Combines totals and balances for each account.
Totals must match for both columns.
6. Treatment of Closing Stock
- Shown as a footnote in trial balance unless adjusted.
- Appears in trial balance when:
a) Gross Profit/Loss or Trading A/c is included
b) Adjusted purchases are shown
c) COGS is shown
7. Suspense Account
- Used when trial balance doesn't match due to unidentified errors.
- No specific account type (not real, personal, or nominal).
- Marked in red ink.
- Eliminated once errors are corrected.
, 8. Kinds of Cash Books
- Single Column Cash Book (Only Cash column)
- Double Column Cash Book (Cash and discount OR Cash and bank
columns)
- Triple Column Cash Book (Cash, bank, and discount columns)
- Bank Cash Book (Bank and discount column)
- Petty Cash Book (Non-analytical and analytical)
9. Contra Entry
- Used when transactions affect both cash and bank accounts (e.g.,
depositing cash in bank or withdrawing cash from bank).
- Marked with ‘C’ in the L.F. column.
- Not posted to any ledger account as both debit and credit entries
appear in the cash book.
10. Types of Petty Cash Books
- Simple/Non-Analytical Petty Cash Book: Similar to a simple cash
book.
- Analytical Petty Cash Book: Has separate columns for different
expenses like postage, wages, and stationery.
1. At recording stage (Journal): Errors of Principle, Omission,
Commission
2. At posting stage (Ledger): Partial Omission, Complete Omission,
Posting to wrong account/side/amount
3. At balancing stage (Ledger): Wrong totaling/balancing
4. At trial balance stage: Omission, Commission (Wrong
account/amount/side)
11. Stages of Errors
12. Classification of Errors
1. Single-sided errors – Affect only one ledger account
2. Double-sided errors – Affect two accounts with the same amount
3. Multiple account errors – Affect more than two accounts