Class 11 Accountancy Financial Statements II Notes

Chapter: Financial Statements – II (Adjustments)


1. Meaning of Adjustments

Financial statements are prepared according to the accrual basis of accounting. Therefore, all incomes and expenses relating to the current year must be recorded, whether cash has been received or paid or not.

Adjustments are made to ensure:

  • Correct profit or loss is calculated.
  • True financial position is shown.
  • Income and expenses are matched with the correct accounting period.

2. Important Adjustments

A. Closing Stock

Meaning

Goods remaining unsold at the end of the accounting year.

Journal Entry

Closing Stock A/c Dr.
To Trading A/c

Treatment

Trading Account

  • Credit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Asset Side

Effect

  • Increases Gross Profit
  • Increases Assets

B. Outstanding Expenses

Meaning

Expenses incurred but not yet paid.

Examples

  • Outstanding Salary
  • Outstanding Wages
  • Outstanding Rent

Journal Entry

Expense A/c Dr.
To Outstanding Expense A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss/Trading Account

  • Add to related expense

Balance Sheet

  • Liability Side

Effect

  • Decreases Profit
  • Increases Liabilities

C. Prepaid Expenses

Meaning

Expenses paid in advance for future periods.

Examples

  • Prepaid Insurance
  • Prepaid Rent
  • Prepaid Salary

Journal Entry

Prepaid Expense A/c Dr.
To Expense A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Deduct from expense

Balance Sheet

  • Asset Side

Effect

  • Increases Profit
  • Increases Assets

D. Accrued Income

Meaning

Income earned but not yet received.

Examples

  • Interest Receivable
  • Rent Receivable
  • Commission Receivable

Journal Entry

Accrued Income A/c Dr.
To Income A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Add to income

Balance Sheet

  • Asset Side

Effect

  • Increases Profit
  • Increases Assets

E. Income Received in Advance

Meaning

Income received before it is earned.

Examples

  • Advance Rent
  • Advance Commission

Journal Entry

Income A/c Dr.
To Income Received in Advance A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Deduct from income

Balance Sheet

  • Liability Side

Effect

  • Decreases Profit
  • Increases Liabilities

F. Depreciation

Meaning

Reduction in the value of fixed assets due to use, wear and tear, or passage of time.

Examples

  • Machinery
  • Furniture
  • Building

Journal Entry

Depreciation A/c Dr.
To Asset A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Deduct from asset value

Effect

  • Decreases Profit
  • Decreases Asset Value

G. Bad Debts

Meaning

Amount that cannot be recovered from debtors.

Journal Entry

Bad Debts A/c Dr.
To Debtors A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Deduct from Debtors

Effect

  • Decreases Profit
  • Decreases Debtors

H. Provision for Doubtful Debts

Meaning

Estimated future loss from debtors who may fail to pay.

Journal Entry

Profit & Loss A/c Dr.
To Provision for Doubtful Debts A/c

Formula

Provision = Debtors × Rate %

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Deduct from Debtors

Effect

  • Decreases Profit
  • Decreases Debtors

I. Provision for Discount on Debtors

Meaning

Expected discount to be allowed to debtors for prompt payment.

Journal Entry

Profit & Loss A/c Dr.
To Provision for Discount on Debtors A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Deduct from Debtors

Effect

  • Decreases Profit

J. Manager’s Commission

Meaning

Commission payable to the manager based on profit.

Journal Entry

Profit & Loss A/c Dr.
To Manager's Commission A/c

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Liability Side (if unpaid)

Commission Before Charging Commission

Formula

Commission = Profit × Rate / 100

Example:

Profit = ₹50,000

Commission = 50,000 × 10%

= ₹5,000


Commission After Charging Commission

Formula

Commission =
Profit × Rate
------------------
100 + Rate

Example:

Profit = ₹50,000

Rate = 10%

Commission

= 50,000 × 10 / 110

= ₹4,545


K. Interest on Capital

Meaning

Interest allowed on owner’s capital invested in business.

Journal Entry

Interest on Capital A/c Dr.
To Capital A/c

Formula

Interest = Capital × Rate × Time

Treatment

Profit & Loss Account

  • Debit Side

Balance Sheet

  • Added to Capital

Effect

  • Reduces Profit
  • Increases Capital

Quick Revision Table

AdjustmentP&L EffectBalance Sheet Effect
Closing StockCreditAsset
Outstanding ExpenseAdd ExpenseLiability
Prepaid ExpenseLess ExpenseAsset
Accrued IncomeAdd IncomeAsset
Income Received in AdvanceLess IncomeLiability
DepreciationExpenseReduce Asset
Bad DebtsExpenseReduce Debtors
Provision for Doubtful DebtsExpenseReduce Debtors
Provision for DiscountExpenseReduce Debtors
Manager’s CommissionExpenseLiability
Interest on CapitalExpenseAdd to Capital

One-Day Exam Revision

Assets

  • Cash
  • Bank
  • Debtors
  • Stock
  • Furniture
  • Machinery

Liabilities

  • Creditors
  • Bills Payable
  • Outstanding Expenses
  • Loan
  • Income Received in Advance

Golden Rule

Outstanding Expense
→ Add to Expense + Liability

Prepaid Expense
→ Less from Expense + Asset

Accrued Income
→ Add to Income + Asset

Income Received in Advance
→ Less from Income + Liability


Most Important Formulas

Gross Profit

Net Sales – Cost of Goods Sold

Net Profit

Gross Profit + Other Incomes – Indirect Expenses

Provision for Doubtful Debts

Debtors × Rate%

Interest on Capital

Capital × Rate × Time

Manager’s Commission (Before)

Profit × Rate / 100

Manager’s Commission (After)

Profit × Rate / (100 + Rate)

Questions

PART A: Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)

1. Unsold goods at the end of the year are called:

A. Purchases
B. Closing Stock
C. Sales
D. Drawings

Answer: B


2. Outstanding expenses are shown on:

A. Asset side
B. Liability side
C. Capital side
D. Trading account credit side

Answer: B


3. Prepaid expenses are:

A. Assets
B. Liabilities
C. Losses
D. Incomes

Answer: A


4. Accrued income is:

A. Income received in advance
B. Income earned but not received
C. Income not earned
D. Capital

Answer: B


5. Depreciation is:

A. Income
B. Liability
C. Expense
D. Asset

Answer: C


6. Bad debts are:

A. Gain
B. Loss
C. Asset
D. Capital

Answer: B


7. Provision for doubtful debts is created on:

A. Creditors
B. Capital
C. Debtors
D. Cash

Answer: C


8. Income received in advance is:

A. Asset
B. Liability
C. Expense
D. Drawings

Answer: B


9. Interest on capital is:

A. Expense of business
B. Income
C. Asset
D. Liability

Answer: A


10. Closing stock appears in:

A. Trading Account only
B. Balance Sheet only
C. Both Trading Account and Balance Sheet
D. Cash Book

Answer: C


PART B: Fill in the Blanks

  1. Unsold goods at year end are called __________.
    Answer: Closing Stock
  2. Expenses incurred but unpaid are called __________ expenses.
    Answer: Outstanding
  3. Income earned but not received is __________ income.
    Answer: Accrued
  4. Depreciation reduces the value of __________.
    Answer: Assets
  5. Bad debts reduce the amount of __________.
    Answer: Debtors
  6. Prepaid expenses are shown as __________.
    Answer: Assets
  7. Income received in advance is a __________.
    Answer: Liability
  8. Provision for doubtful debts is created on __________.
    Answer: Debtors
  9. Manager’s commission is charged to __________ Account.
    Answer: Profit and Loss
  10. Interest on capital is added to __________.
    Answer: Capital

PART C: True or False

  1. Closing stock is an asset.
    True
  2. Outstanding expenses are assets.
    False
  3. Prepaid expenses increase profit.
    True
  4. Depreciation is an expense.
    True
  5. Accrued income is a liability.
    False
  6. Income received in advance is a liability.
    True
  7. Bad debts increase profit.
    False
  8. Provision for doubtful debts reduces debtor value.
    True
  9. Interest on capital is shown on debit side of P&L Account.
    True
  10. Manager’s commission decreases profit.
    True

PART D: Match the Following

Column AColumn B
Closing StockAsset
Outstanding SalaryLiability
Prepaid InsuranceAsset
DepreciationExpense
Accrued RentAsset

Answers

  • Closing Stock → Asset
  • Outstanding Salary → Liability
  • Prepaid Insurance → Asset
  • Depreciation → Expense
  • Accrued Rent → Asset

PART E: One Word Answers

  1. Expense paid in advance.
    Prepaid Expense
  2. Income earned but not received.
    Accrued Income
  3. Decline in asset value.
    Depreciation
  4. Amount irrecoverable from debtors.
    Bad Debt
  5. Unsold goods.
    Closing Stock
  6. Income received before earning.
    Unearned Income
  7. Estimated future bad debts.
    Provision
  8. Person owing money to business.
    Debtor
  9. Interest allowed on owner’s investment.
    Interest on Capital
  10. Reward paid to manager from profits.
    Commission

PART F: Very Short Answer Questions

1. What is closing stock?

Goods remaining unsold at the end of the accounting year.

2. What are outstanding expenses?

Expenses incurred but not paid.

3. What are prepaid expenses?

Expenses paid in advance.

4. What is accrued income?

Income earned but not yet received.

5. What is depreciation?

Decrease in value of assets due to use and time.

6. What are bad debts?

Amounts not recoverable from debtors.

7. Why is provision for doubtful debts created?

To cover expected future bad debts.

8. What is manager’s commission?

Commission paid to manager based on profits.

9. What is income received in advance?

Income received before it is earned.

10. What is interest on capital?

Interest allowed on owner’s capital.


PART G: Short Answer Questions (2–3 Marks)

1. Why are adjustments necessary?

Adjustments are necessary to:

  • Calculate correct profit.
  • Show true financial position.
  • Follow accrual accounting.

2. Explain prepaid expenses.

Prepaid expenses are payments made in advance for future periods. They are treated as assets and deducted from expenses.


3. Explain accrued income.

Accrued income is income earned but not yet received. It is added to income and shown as an asset.


4. Explain outstanding expenses.

Outstanding expenses are expenses due but unpaid. They are added to expenses and shown as liabilities.


5. Explain bad debts.

Bad debts are amounts that cannot be recovered from customers and are treated as losses.


PART H: Long Answer Questions (5 Marks)

1. Explain treatment of closing stock.

  • Credited to Trading Account.
  • Shown on asset side of Balance Sheet.
  • Increases gross profit.
  • Increases total assets.

2. Explain accounting treatment of depreciation.

  • Debit Depreciation Account.
  • Credit Asset Account.
  • Shown on debit side of P&L Account.
  • Deducted from asset value in Balance Sheet.

3. Explain provision for doubtful debts.

Provision is created to cover possible future losses from debtors.
It is:

  • Debited to P&L Account.
  • Deducted from debtors in Balance Sheet.

PART I: Assertion–Reason Questions

1.

Assertion: Outstanding expenses are added to expenses.

Reason: They relate to current accounting year.

A. Both true and reason explains assertion.

Answer: A


2.

Assertion: Prepaid expenses are assets.

Reason: Benefit will be received in future.

Answer: A


3.

Assertion: Bad debts increase profits.

Reason: They represent gain.

Answer: Both False


4.

Assertion: Depreciation is charged every year.

Reason: Assets lose value with use and time.

Answer: A


5.

Assertion: Income received in advance is liability.

Reason: Service is yet to be provided.

Answer: A


PART J: Case Study Questions

Case Study 1

A business paid insurance ₹12,000 for one year. At year end, ₹3,000 relates to next year.

Questions

  1. What type of adjustment is this?
    Prepaid Expense
  2. Amount of prepaid insurance?
    ₹3,000
  3. Amount charged to P&L?
    ₹9,000
  4. Where is prepaid insurance shown?
    Asset Side

Case Study 2

A business has debtors of ₹50,000. Further bad debts ₹2,000 and provision @5%.

Questions

  1. Debtors after bad debts?
    ₹48,000
  2. Provision amount?
    ₹2,400
  3. Nature of provision?
    Expected loss
  4. Where shown?
    Deducted from Debtors

PART K: HOTS (Higher Order Thinking Questions)

  1. Why is depreciation charged even when asset is not sold?
  2. Why is income received in advance treated as liability?
  3. Why is accrued income treated as asset?
  4. Why are bad debts deducted from debtors?
  5. Why is provision created before actual loss occurs?

PART L: Important Numerical Practice

1.

Outstanding Salary = ₹2,000
Salary Paid = ₹18,000

Salary shown in P&L = ₹20,000


2.

Insurance Paid = ₹10,000
Prepaid = ₹2,000

Insurance Expense = ₹8,000


3.

Debtors = ₹40,000
Bad Debts = ₹2,000

Debtors in Balance Sheet = ₹38,000


4.

Capital = ₹50,000
Interest Rate = 10%

Interest on Capital = ₹5,000


5.

Profit Before Commission = ₹80,000
Commission = 10%

Commission = ₹8,000