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Accounting Life Cycle

What is Accounting Life Cycle. Explain it's importance

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Question added by Deleted user
Date Posted: 2014/07/29
Yajna Sapkota
by Yajna Sapkota , Manager , Cooperatives organization

Purchase the raw materials or products and get production, sale the products get the benefit and customer satisfaction and increase the profit is the accounting life cycle.

Jaishri Navani
by Jaishri Navani , Finance Manager , West Zone Fresh Supermarket LLC

As a bookkeeper, you complete your work by completing the tasks of the accounting cycle. It’s called a cycle because the accounting workflow is circular: entering transactions, manipulating the transactions through the accounting cycle, closing the books at the end of the accounting period, and then starting the entire cycle again for the next accounting period.

The accounting cycle has eight basic steps, which you can see in the following illustration. These steps are described in the list below.

  1. Transactions

    Financial transactions start the process. Transactions can include the sale or return of a product, the purchase of supplies for business activities, or any other financial activity that involves the exchange of the company’s assets, the establishment or payoff of a debt, or the deposit from or payout of money to the company’s owners.

  2. Journal entries

    The transaction is listed in the appropriate journal, maintaining the journal’s chronological order of transactions. The journal is also known as the “book of original entry” and is the first place a transaction is listed.

  3. Posting

    The transactions are posted to the account that it impacts. These accounts are part of the General Ledger, where you can find a summary of all the business’s accounts.

  4. Trial balance

    At the end of the accounting period (which may be a month, quarter, or year depending on a business’s practices), you calculate a trial balance.

  5. Worksheet

    Unfortunately, many times your first calculation of the trial balance shows that the books aren’t in balance. If that’s the case, you look for errors and make corrections called adjustments, which are tracked on a worksheet.

    Adjustments are also made to account for the depreciation of assets and to adjust for one-time payments (such as insurance) that should be allocated on a monthly basis to more accurately match monthly expenses with monthly revenues. After you make and record adjustments, you take another trial balance to be sure the accounts are in balance.

  6. Adjusting journal entries

    You post any corrections needed to the affected accounts once your trial balance shows the accounts will be balanced once the adjustments needed are made to the accounts. You don’t need to make adjusting entries until the trial balance process is completed and all needed corrections and adjustments have been identified.

  7. Financial statements

    You prepare the balance sheet and income statement using the corrected account balances.

  8. Closing the books

    You close the books for the revenue and expense accounts and begin the entire cycle again with zero balances in those accounts.

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