QuickBooks 2022 All-in-One For Dummies. Stephen L. Nelson

QuickBooks 2022 All-in-One For Dummies - Stephen L. Nelson


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_ee28a212-9a02-5f29-9e1b-ef0313f2cdfb">Table 2-18 shows the T-account analysis of the loan payable account. In both cases, the T-account analysis shows that the liability accounts start with a credit beginning balance. (Remember that a liability account would have a credit balance if the firm really owed money.) Then, when the payments are recorded to pay off the accounts payable and loan payable in journal entries 9 and 10, the liability account is debited. The result, in the case of both accounts, is that the liability account balance is reduced to zero.

Debit Credit
Beginning balance $2,000
Journal Entry 9 $2,000
Ending balance $0
Debit Credit
Beginning balance $1,000
Journal Entry 10 $1,000
Ending balance $0

      I’m not going to show T-account analyses of the other accounts that the preceding journal entries use. In every other case, the only debit or credit to the account comes from the journal entry, which means that the journal entry amount is the account balance. Only one journal entry affects the sales revenue account: Journal Entry 7, which credits sales revenue for $13,000. Because the sales revenue account has no beginning balance, that $13,000 credit equals the sales revenue account balance. The expense accounts work the same way.

      Using T-account analysis results

Account Debit Credit
Cash $5,000
Inventory 0
Accounts payable $0
Loan payable 0
S. Nelson, capital $1,000
Sales revenue 13,000
Cost of goods sold 3,000
Rent 1,000
Wages expense 4,000
Supplies 1,000 _____
Totals $14,000 $14,000

      The first line shown in the trial balance in Table 2-19 is the cash account, with a debit balance of $5,000. This debit account balance comes from the T-account analysis shown in Table 2-15. The account balances for inventory, accounts payable, and loan payable also come from the T-account analyses shown previously in this chapter (Tables 2-16, 2-17, and 2-18).

      As I note in the preceding section, you don’t need to perform T-account analyses for the other accounts shown in the trial balance provided in Table 2-19. These other accounts show a single debit or credit.

      Similarly, the asset, liability, and owner’s equity balance information shown in the trial balance provided in Table 2-19 supplies the information necessary to construct a balance sheet as of the end of the day.

      

The end-of-day balance sheet won’t balance unless you also include the profits of the day. These profits, called retained earnings or lumped into the owner’s capital account, equal $4,000. You can see what this end-of-day balance sheet looks like by reading Book 1, Chapter 1. In that chapter, Table 1-9 shows the end-of-day balance sheet for the hot-dog-stand business.

      Before I end this chapter, I want to make a few comments about how QuickBooks helps you. First — and this point may be the most important one — QuickBooks makes most of these journal entries for you. In Journal Entry 6, for example, I


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