The accounting process is three separate types of transactions
used to record business transactions in the accounting records.
This information is then aggregated into financial statements. The
transaction types are:
- The first transaction type is to ensure that reversing entries
from the previous period have, in fact, been reversed.
- The second group is comprised of the steps needed to record
individual business transactions in the accounting records.
- The third group is the period-end processing required to close
the books and produce financial statements.
We will address these three parts of the accounting process
below.
Beginning of Period Processing
Verify that all transactions designated as reversing entries in
preceding periods have actually been reversed. Doing so ensures
that transactions are not recorded twice in the current period.
These transactions are usually flagged as being reversing entries
in the accounting software, so the reversal should be automatic.
Nonetheless, examine the accounts at the beginning of the period to
verify the reversals. If a reversing flag was not set, an entry
must be reversed manually, using a new journal entry.
Individual Transactions
The steps required for individual transactions in the accounting
process are:
- Identify the transaction. First, determine what kind
of transaction it may be. Examples are buying goods from suppliers,
selling products to customers, paying employees, and recording the
receipt of cash from customers.
- Prepare document. There is frequently a business
document to be prepared or recognized to initiate the transaction,
such as an invoice to a customer or an invoice from a
supplier.
- Identify accounts. Every business transaction is
recorded in an account in the accounting database, such as a
revenue, expense, asset, liability, or stockholders' equity
account. Identify which accounts are to be used to record the
transaction.
- Record the transaction. Enter the transaction in the
accounting system. This is done either with a journal entry or an
on-line standard transaction form (such as is used to record cash
receipts against open accounts receivable). In the latter case, the
transaction forms record information in a pre-determined set of
accounts (which can be overridden).
These four steps are the part of the accounting process used to
record individual business transactions in the accounting
records.
Period-End Processing
The remaining steps in the accounting process are used to
aggregate all of the information created in the preceding steps,
and present it in the format of financial statements. The steps
are:
- Prepare trial balance. The trial balance is a listing
of the ending balances in every account. The total of all the
debits in the trial balance should equal the total of all the
credits; if not, there was an error in the entry of the original
transactions that must be researched and corrected.
- Adjust the trial balance. It may be necessary to
adjust the trial balance, either to correct errors or to create
allowances of various kinds, or to accrue for revenues or expenses
in the period.
- Prepare adjusted trial balance. This is the original
trial balance, plus or minus all adjustments subsequently
made.
- Prepare financial statements. Create the financial
statements from the adjusted trial balance. The asset, liability,
and shareholders' equity line items form the balance sheet, while
the revenue expense line items form the income statement.
- Close the period. This involves shifting the balances
in the revenue and expense accounts into the retained earnings
account, leaving them empty and ready to receive transactions for
the next accounting period.
- Prepare a post-closing trial balance. This version of
the trial balance should have zero account balances for all revenue
and expense accounts.
In reality, any accounting software package will automatically
create all versions of the trial balance and the financial
statements, so the actual steps in the accounting process may be
considerably reduced. Instead, the steps used in a computerized
environment are likely to be:
- Prepare financial statements. This information is
automatically compiled from the general ledger by the accounting
software.
- Close the period. The accounting staff closes the
accounting period that has just been completed, and opens the new
accounting period. Doing so prevents current-period transactions
from being inadvertently entered into the prior accounting period.
In a multi-division company, it may be necessary to complete this
period closing step in the software for each subsidiary.