Business Transactions, Vouchers and Accounting Equation
Business Transactions And Source Document
As discussed in the chapter on Basic Accounting Terminology, a
For a transaction to be recorded in the books of accounts, there must be reliable and objective evidence that it occurred. This evidence is provided by
Examples of Source Documents:
- Cash Memo / Bill / Invoice: Issued when goods are sold or purchased for cash or credit. It details the items, quantity, rate, amount, date, and parties involved.
- Receipt: Issued when cash or a cheque is received from a party.
- Pay-in-slip: Used when depositing cash or cheques into the bank account.
- Cheque: A written order to a bank to pay a stated amount of money to a specified person or bearer. Used for making payments.
- Debit Note: Issued to a supplier when goods are returned by the buyer (Purchase Return). It indicates that the supplier's account is being debited.
- Credit Note: Issued to a customer when goods are returned by the customer (Sales Return). It indicates that the customer's account is being credited.
Source documents serve as the basis for preparing accounting vouchers and are essential for verifying the accuracy of accounting records during an audit. Maintaining proper source documents is a legal requirement for businesses in India.
Preparation Of Accounting Vouchers
An
Vouchers are typically pre-numbered and prepared chronologically. They contain details like the date, voucher number, amount, narration (brief description of the transaction), names of the accounts to be debited and credited, and authorisation signatures.
Types of Accounting Vouchers:
- Debit Voucher: Prepared for transactions involving cash/bank payments (e.g., payment of salary, purchase of assets for cash, cash purchases of goods). It indicates which account is to be debited.
- Credit Voucher: Prepared for transactions involving cash/bank receipts (e.g., cash sales, receipt from debtors, interest received). It indicates which account is to be credited.
- Non-Cash Voucher / Transfer Voucher / Journal Voucher: Prepared for transactions that do not involve cash or bank (e.g., credit purchases, credit sales, depreciation of assets, goods returned). It documents transactions that are recorded in the Journal.
Example 1. Voucher Preparation.
A business in Pune pays monthly rent of ₹15,000 by cheque on 5th July 2024. The source document is the rent receipt/agreement and the bank statement showing the cheque payment.
Answer:
Based on the source document, a
Details on the voucher would include:
- Voucher No. (e.g., PV/2024-25/005)
- Date: 05.07.2024
- Debit: Rent Account ₹15,000
- Credit: Bank Account ₹15,000
- Narration: Being rent paid for July 2024 by cheque.
- Amount: ₹15,000
- Prepared by: (Signature)
- Authorised by: (Signature)
- Supported by: Cheque No. ______, Rent Receipt/Agreement
This debit voucher then serves as the internal document for recording the transaction in the Journal and Cash Book.
Proper voucher preparation ensures that all transactions are authorised, documented, and accurately recorded, strengthening the internal control system of the business.
Accounting Equation
The
The Fundamental Equation
This equation can also be expressed as:
Or
Derivation/Explanation:
The total resources owned by a business are its
- External Parties: Funds provided by creditors, banks, etc. These represent the business's
Liabilities (claims of outsiders). - Internal Parties: Funds provided by the owner(s). This represents the owner's claim, known as
Capital .
Therefore, the total resources (Assets) must always equal the total claims against those resources (Liabilities + Capital).
Impact of Transactions on the Accounting Equation
Every transaction affects at least two components of the equation, but the equation always remains in balance. The total of the left side (Assets) will always equal the total of the right side (Liabilities + Capital).
Examples of Transactions and their effect on the Accounting Equation:
Example 2. Transaction 1: Mr. Arun started business with cash ₹1,00,000.
Answer:
Assets (Cash) increase by ₹1,00,000.
Capital (Owner's Investment) increases by ₹1,00,000.
| Assets | = | Liabilities | + | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash: ₹1,00,000 | = | ₹0 | + | ₹1,00,000 |
Equation is in balance: ₹1,00,000 = ₹0 + ₹1,00,000
Example 3. Transaction 2: Purchased goods for cash ₹30,000.
Answer:
Assets (Goods/Stock) increase by ₹30,000.
Assets (Cash) decrease by ₹30,000.
Previous Equation: Assets ₹1,00,000 = Liabilities ₹0 + Capital ₹1,00,000
| Assets (Cash) | + | Assets (Stock) | = | Liabilities | + | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹1,00,000 - ₹30,000 | + | ₹30,000 | = | ₹0 | + | ₹1,00,000 |
| ₹70,000 | + | ₹30,000 | = | ₹0 | + | ₹1,00,000 |
| = |
Equation is in balance: ₹1,00,000 = ₹0 + ₹1,00,000
Example 4. Transaction 3: Purchased goods on credit from Mr. Vikas ₹20,000.
Answer:
Assets (Goods/Stock) increase by ₹20,000.
Liabilities (Creditors - Mr. Vikas) increase by ₹20,000.
Previous Equation: Assets (Cash ₹70,000 + Stock ₹30,000) = Liabilities ₹0 + Capital ₹1,00,000
| Assets (Cash) | + | Assets (Stock) | = | Liabilities (Creditors) | + | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹70,000 | + | ₹30,000 + ₹20,000 | = | ₹0 + ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,00,000 |
| ₹70,000 | + | ₹50,000 | = | ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,00,000 |
| = |
Equation is in balance: ₹1,20,000 = ₹20,000 + ₹1,00,000
Example 5. Transaction 4: Sold goods costing ₹40,000 for ₹60,000 cash.
Answer:
Assets (Cash) increase by ₹60,000 (amount received).
Assets (Goods/Stock) decrease by ₹40,000 (cost of goods sold).
The difference (₹60,000 - ₹40,000 = ₹20,000) is Profit, which increases Capital.
Previous Equation: Assets (Cash ₹70,000 + Stock ₹50,000) = Liabilities (Creditors ₹20,000) + Capital ₹1,00,000
| Assets (Cash) | + | Assets (Stock) | = | Liabilities (Creditors) | + | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹70,000 + ₹60,000 | + | ₹50,000 - ₹40,000 | = | ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,00,000 + Profit (₹20,000) |
| ₹1,30,000 | + | ₹10,000 | = | ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,20,000 |
| = |
Equation is in balance: ₹1,40,000 = ₹20,000 + ₹1,20,000
Example 6. Transaction 5: Paid rent ₹5,000.
Answer:
Assets (Cash) decrease by ₹5,000.
Rent is an Expense, which reduces Profit, and thus reduces Capital.
Previous Equation: Assets (Cash ₹1,30,000 + Stock ₹10,000) = Liabilities (Creditors ₹20,000) + Capital ₹1,20,000
| Assets (Cash) | + | Assets (Stock) | = | Liabilities (Creditors) | + | Capital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹1,30,000 - ₹5,000 | + | ₹10,000 | = | ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,20,000 - Expense (₹5,000) |
| ₹1,25,000 | + | ₹10,000 | = | ₹20,000 | + | ₹1,15,000 |
| = |
Equation is in balance: ₹1,35,000 = ₹20,000 + ₹1,15,000
The Accounting Equation is a powerful tool for understanding the double-entry system and how every transaction impacts the financial structure of a business while maintaining balance. It forms the basis for preparing the Balance Sheet.