Introduction
Financial accounting serves as a cornerstone for businesses, providing structured methods to record, classify, and report financial transactions. This essay addresses three key questions in financial accounting, drawing from practical scenarios and conceptual frameworks relevant to undergraduate studies in this field. As a student exploring financial accounting, I find these topics essential for understanding how companies manage assets, track receivables, and adhere to international standards. The first question focuses on preparing ledger accounts for equipment in Josaya Limited, illustrating depreciation and disposal processes. The second examines the trade receivables control account for Chombela Limited, highlighting control mechanisms in debtor management. Finally, the third question delves into the IASB’s Conceptual Framework, explaining qualitative characteristics, recognition criteria, and the principle of substance over form. Through detailed analysis and examples, this essay demonstrates a sound understanding of these concepts, supported by evidence from authoritative sources. By addressing these areas, the discussion underscores the applicability of accounting principles in real-world contexts, while acknowledging limitations such as the need for professional judgment in complex scenarios. The essay aims to evaluate these elements logically, with some critical insights into their practical implications.
Question One: Ledger Accounts for Josaya Limited
In financial accounting, ledger accounts are fundamental tools for tracking asset values, depreciation, and disposals, ensuring compliance with standards like IAS 16 (Property, Plant and Equipment). For Josaya Limited, the equipment accounts must reflect the reducing balance depreciation method at 25%, applied fully on year-end balances. This method, often used for assets with diminishing utility, calculates depreciation on the net book value, which can lead to higher charges in early years compared to straight-line approaches (Alexander et al., 2017). Arguably, this provides a more faithful representation of economic reality for certain assets, though it requires careful computation to avoid errors.
Starting with the Equipment account, the opening balance at 1 January 2021 is K272,000. During the year, new equipment costing K98,000 is added, increasing the total. However, equipment originally costing K70,000 is sold, necessitating a transfer to the disposal account. Therefore, the closing balance is calculated as K272,000 + K98,000 – K70,000 = K300,000. The ledger would appear as follows:
Equipment Account
| Date | Details | Debit (K) | Credit (K) | Balance (K) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Jan 2021 | Balance b/d | 272,000 | ||
| During 2021 | Bank (purchase) | 98,000 | 370,000 | |
| 31 Dec 2021 | Disposal (transfer) | 70,000 | 300,000 |
Next, the Equipment Accumulated Depreciation Account begins with K162,000. Depreciation for the year must be computed on the net book value at year-end, after accounting for the disposal. The sold equipment had accumulated depreciation of K54,000, so this is transferred out. The net book value before new depreciation is (K272,000 – K162,000) + K98,000 – (K70,000 – K54,000) = K110,000 + K98,000 – K16,000 = K192,000. However, to clarify: the opening net book value is K272,000 – K162,000 = K110,000. Additions are at cost, K98,000, but depreciation is on year-end assets in use. The sold asset’s net book value was K70,000 – K54,000 = K16,000, sold for K12,000, implying a loss. For year-end depreciation: total cost at year-end K300,000, but accumulated depreciation after transfer is K162,000 – K54,000 = K108,000, so net book value before depreciation K300,000 – K108,000 = K192,000. Depreciation at 25% is K192,000 * 0.25 = K48,000. Thus, closing accumulated depreciation is K108,000 + K48,000 = K156,000.
Equipment Accumulated Depreciation Account
| Date | Details | Debit (K) | Credit (K) | Balance (K) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Jan 2021 | Balance b/d | 162,000 | ||
| 31 Dec 2021 | Disposal (transfer) | 54,000 | 108,000 | |
| 31 Dec 2021 | Depreciation expense | 48,000 | 156,000 |
The Equipment Disposal Account captures the sale: transfer in cost K70,000, transfer out accumulated depreciation K54,000 (debit), proceeds K12,000. The loss on disposal is K16,000 (net book value) – K12,000 = K4,000, transferred to profit or loss.
Equipment Disposal Account
| Date | Details | Debit (K) | Credit (K) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 31 Dec 2021 | Equipment (cost) | 70,000 | |
| 31 Dec 2021 | Accumulated Depreciation | 54,000 | |
| 31 Dec 2021 | Bank (proceeds) | 12,000 | |
| 31 Dec 2021 | Profit or Loss (loss) | 4,000 | |
| Total | 74,000 | 74,000 |
This setup ensures accurate reporting, though critics note that reducing balance may not suit all assets equally (Wood and Sangster, 2020).
Question Two: Trade Receivables Control Account for Chombela Limited
Control accounts in double-entry bookkeeping aggregate subsidiary ledger details, aiding error detection and financial control, as emphasized in accounting texts (Drury, 2018). For Chombela Limited, the trade receivables control account starts with a net debit balance of K100,200 – K280 = K99,920 on 1 January 2021. Transactions include credit sales K623,000 (increasing debtors), cheques received K599,650 (decreasing), irrecoverable receivables K1,020 (written off), discounts allowed K17,400 (reduction), returns inwards K5,315 (reduction). Additionally, transfers to purchases ledger K2,190 (contra entry, reducing debtors), and ending credit balances K185. Note: returns outwards and discounts received relate to purchases, not receivables, so they are excluded here. Sales ledger credit balances at month-end are K185, which may adjust the net position.
The account is prepared as follows:
Trade Receivables Control Account
| Date | Details | Debit (K) | Credit (K) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Jan 2021 | Balance b/d (debit) | 100,200 | |
| 1 Jan 2021 | Balance b/d (credit) | 280 | |
| Jan 2021 | Credit sales | 623,000 | |
| Jan 2021 | Cheques received | 599,650 | |
| Jan 2021 | Irrecoverable receivables | 1,020 | |
| Jan 2021 | Discounts allowed | 17,400 | |
| Jan 2021 | Returns inwards | 5,315 | |
| Jan 2021 | Transfer to purchases ledger | 2,190 | |
| 31 Jan 2021 | Balance c/d (credit) | 185 | |
| Total | 723,200 | 625,040 | |
| 31 Jan 2021 | Balance c/d (debit) | 97,945 |
Balancing: Total debits K723,200, credits K625,040 (excluding final balance), difference K98,160, but adjusting for ending credit K185 yields net debit K97,975? Recalculating precisely: Opening net K99,920 + sales K623,000 = K722,920; minus cheques K599,650 = K123,270; minus bad debts K1,020 = K122,250; minus discounts K17,400 = K104,850; minus returns K5,315 = K99,535; minus transfer K2,190 = K97,345. The query mentions sales ledger credit balances at 31 January K185, suggesting an adjustment, but typically, the control account nets to a debit balance. Indeed, further checks indicate potential for K97,345 + adjustment, but based on given data, the closing debit is approximately K97,530 if considering credits. However, standard preparation shows closing debit as K100,200 + K623,000 – K280 – K599,650 – K1,020 – K17,400 – K5,315 – K2,190 + K185 (as contra credit), but let’s standardize: the account balances to K97,345 debit if ignoring end credit as separate. Upon critical evaluation, the ending credit is likely the net credit balance, so closing debit is K97,530. This tool helps in reconciled reporting, though limitations exist in fraud detection without subsidiary details (Thomas and Ward, 2019).
Question Three: Concepts from the IASB Conceptual Framework
The IASB’s Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting (2018) guides standard-setting, emphasizing qualitative characteristics for useful information. (i) Relevance means information influences decisions by having predictive or confirmatory value, while faithful representation ensures completeness, neutrality, and freedom from error. For instance, relevant information might predict cash flows, but if not faithfully represented (e.g., biased), it’s unreliable (IASB, 2018). Typically, these are fundamental, enhancing decision-usefulness, though trade-offs occur when relevance conflicts with verifiability.
(ii) Recognition criteria for assets and liabilities require probable future economic benefits (assets) or outflows (liabilities), reliable measurement, and cost/benefits justification. An asset is recognized if it meets the definition and these criteria, such as inventory with probable sale (IASB, 2018). Liabilities follow similarly, ensuring balance sheet integrity.
(iii) Substance over form prioritizes economic reality over legal appearance, as in finance leases treated as assets despite no ownership (Alexander et al., 2017). For example, a company leasing equipment under terms transferring risks and rewards records it as an asset, reflecting true control, not just the lease contract. This principle, integral to faithful representation, prevents misleading statements but demands judgment, potentially leading to disputes.
Conclusion
This essay has explored key financial accounting practices through ledger preparation, control accounts, and conceptual explanations, demonstrating their role in accurate reporting. From Josaya Limited’s depreciation handling to Chombela’s receivables management and IASB principles, these elements highlight the field’s emphasis on reliability and relevance. Implications include improved decision-making, though limitations like subjective judgments persist. Overall, these topics reinforce the need for ethical, evidence-based accounting in business contexts, aligning with undergraduate learning objectives.
References
- Alexander, D., Britton, A., Jorissen, A., Hoogendoorn, M., Van Mourik, C. (2017) International Financial Reporting and Analysis. 7th edn. Cengage Learning.
- Drury, C. (2018) Management and Cost Accounting. 10th edn. Cengage Learning.
- IASB (2018) Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting. International Accounting Standards Board.
- Thomas, A. and Ward, A.M. (2019) Introduction to Financial Accounting. 9th edn. McGraw-Hill Education.
- Wood, F. and Sangster, A. (2020) Frank Wood’s Business Accounting. 14th edn. Pearson.

