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Engineering Management Accounting Lecture 3

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Balance Sheet (Financial Position) Profit and Loss ... Short-term borrowings e.g. overdraft. Accounts payable. Taxes. Non-current. Long term borrowings ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Engineering Management Accounting Lecture 3


1
Engineering ManagementAccounting Lecture 3
ELE 2EMT
George Alexander G.Alexander_at_latrobe.edu.au http/
/www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/
10 August, 2007
2
Last week
  • Financial Accounting
  • Balance Sheet (Financial Position)
  • Profit and Loss Statement (Financial Performance)
  • Brief look at assets/depreciation

3
This week
  • A closer look at why we classify certain
    expenditure as capital expenditure - assets
  • The importance of accurately valuing assets
  • The role of depreciation and how it works
  • Types of Depreciation
  • Depreciation Terminology
  • Straight Line Depreciation
  • Declining Balance Depreciation

4
Definition of Assets (Bazley)
  • Assets Future economic benefits controlled by
    the entity as a result of past transactions or
    other past events
  • Fixed assets held for the purpose of
    generating income over a number of years.
  • Current assets cash or cash-equivalent,
    expected to be realised within 12 months of the
    reporting date.

5
Types of Assets
  • Fixed Assets
  • Buildings
  • Plant
  • Equipment
  • Current Assets
  • Stock (inventory)
  • Cash on hand
  • Accounts receivable
  • Short-term investments
  • Intangible assets e.g. patents, goodwill

6
Liabilities
  • What the firm owes as a result of past
    borrowings or expenditure
  • Current
  • Short-term borrowings e.g. overdraft
  • Accounts payable
  • Taxes
  • Non-current
  • Long term borrowings
  • Other future commitments

7
Owners Equity Assets Liabilities
8
Valuing non-fixed assets
  • Often, these are recorded as cash amounts, so the
    value is quite clear.
  • Current assets such as stock can prove a problem
    if it is subject to deterioration or
    obsolescence.
  • Some areas such as intangibles, and provisions
    for future liabilities, can be difficult to
    estimate and are usually closely audited.

9
Why capitalise/depreciate?
  • Capital assets have an estimated useful lifetime.
  • Consequently, it would be misleading to account
    for the associated expenditure in just one
    accounting period.
  • As a result, the expenditure is accounted for
    over the assets lifetime through depreciation.
  • This also provides a basis for valuing the asset.
  • ATO requires that the asset expense deduction is
    claimed over the assets lifetime.

10
Depreciation - an introduction
  • Capital investment in tangible assets -
    equipment, computers, vehicles, buildings, and
    machinery - are commonly recovered through
    depreciation.
  • Depreciation also referred to as capital recovery
    (US) and capital allowance (ATO)
  • Refer ATO Guide to Depreciating Assets 2006-07
  • http//www.ato.gov.au/individuals/content.asp?doc
    /Content/00096847.htm
  • The depreciation amount itself is not an actual
    cash flow, but may provide cash flow benefits.

11
Introduction - cont.
  • The process of depreciating an asset accounts for
    the decrease in an assets value because of age,
    wear, and obsolescence.
  • Depreciation is a tax-allowed deduction included
    in tax calculations.
  • Taxes (income - deductions)(tax rate)

12
Types of Depreciation
  • Depreciation
  • Depreciation is the reduction in value of an
    asset.
  • It does not represent an actual cash flow.
  • It does not necessarily reflect the actual usage
    pattern.
  • Book Depreciation
  • Used by a corporation or business for the purpose
    of internal financial accounting.
  • Tax Depreciation
  • Used by a corporation or business for the purpose
    of tax calculations as per government regulations.

13
Book Depreciation
  • Used for internal managerial decision making.
  • Management is free to use any method they so
    choose to compute book depreciation amounts.
  • Any method can be used
  • Straight Line,
  • Declining Balance
  • Sum-of-the-years digits
  • Other.
  • Defines the reduced investment in an asset based
    upon usage pattern and an assumed life.

14
Tax Depreciation
  • Must follow the current federal law pertaining to
    acceptable methods for computing depreciation for
    income tax purposes.
  • It may have nothing to do with the actual life
    of the asset or the usage pattern.

15
Depreciation Terminology - cont.
  • Salvage Value
  • The estimated trade-in or market value at the end
    of the assets useful life.
  • Market Value
  • The estimated amount realisable if the asset was
    sold on the open market.
  • The market value and book value may be
    substantially different.
  • Book Value
  • The remaining, undepreciated capital investment
    on the books after subtracting all depreciation
    to date.

16
Book Value v Time - General Case
17
Depreciation Terminology - cont.
  • Recovery Period
  • Recovery period is the depreciable life n of
    the asset in years.
  • Depreciation Rate
  • Depreciation rate or recovery rate is the
    fraction of the first cost removed by
    depreciation each year.
  • First Cost - unadjusted basis
  • The purchase price of a new asset including
    delivered and installed cost and any other
    depreciable cost.

18
Depreciation Terminology - cont.
  • First Cost - adjusted basis
  • The term adjusted basis is used when the asset is
    not new and some depreciation has been charged.
  • Real Property
  • It includes real estate and all improvements -
    office building, manufacturing structure, test
    facilities, warehouse, apartments and other
    structures.
  • Land itself is considered real property but it is
    not depreciable.

19
Different Depreciation Methods
20
Straight Line Depreciation
  • The book value decreases linearly with time.
  • The depreciation rate, d 1/n, is the same each
    year of recovery period n.
  • It is considered the standard against which any
    depreciation model is compared.
  • The annual SL depreciation is determined by
  • (first cost - salvage value) d

21
Example
B 50,000 n 5 years S 10,000 at t
5 Dt for each year is (50,000 - 10,000)/5
8,000/year
22
Solution
using
d 1 / n Dt (B -S) d (B - S) / n
Book value BVt B tDt
Notation (to be followed herein) t the year (t
1,2, , n) Dt Annual depreciation charge, B
The first cost or unadjusted basis, S Estimated
Salvage Value at t n, n The Recovery
Period, d The Depreciation Rate 1/n
23
Table of Results
24
Plot of SL Book Value
25
Accelerated Depreciation
  • SL book values decline in a linear fashion down
    to a specified salvage value.
  • Declining Balance (DB) method allows the book
    value to accelerate faster.
  • Per ATO web site, rate 150/n for zero residual
    value. (200/n for acquisitions after 10/5/2006)
  • The SL method writes off the asset in equal
    amounts over the recovery period.
  • The DB method permits greater depreciation
    amounts in the early years, and hence reduces the
    book value faster than the SL method.

26
Accelerated Depreciation - cont.
  • More depreciation in the early years means more
    tax savings sooner.
  • Assumes a profitable firm.
  • Tax savings early in the life of an asset has a
    greater present value than tax savings out in
    time.
  • Larger depreciation amounts early on result in
    increased present worth of future tax savings to
    the firm.

27
What it means for the firm ?
  • If the firm is profitable, then more depreciation
    amounts in the early years means
  • Lower tax liability
  • Pay less taxes more available for
    reinvestment!
  • The firm can retain more after-tax funds if the
    depreciation is accelerated in the early years of
    an assets life.
  • Thus, more depreciation early on are better!

28
Previous example SL vs DB
Test using ATO calculator at http//calculators.
ato.gov.au/scripts/axos/axos.asp?CONTEXT KBSDep
reciating_assets.XR4gook
29
Refer ATO web site
  • Refer description/examples on link below
  • http//www.ato.gov.au/individuals/content.asp?doc
  • /Content/00096847.htm
  • Note ATO terminology
  • DB Diminishing Value
  • SL Prime Cost Method

30
References
  • Bazley, Hancock, Berry, Jarvis Contemporary
    Accounting, Thomson
  • Australian Taxation Office website
  • www.ato.gov.au

31
Thanks for your attention
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