PQ magazine, July 2021

Page 36

PQ AAT focus

Depreciation, and how it works In the first of a new regular column, AAT expert Teresa Clarke looks at the thorny issue of depreciation Diminishing (reducing) balance depreciation For this method you need to know the cost of the asset and the depreciation percentage. Any other information such as residual value is not relevant. Example: Let us look again at the crisp factory. The business buys a delivery van which could be used by the business for several years, so the diminishing balance method has been chosen. The cost of the new delivery van is £24,000. The rate of depreciation is 15% reducing balance. To calculate: Year 1 – cost x depreciation percentage £24,000 x 15% = £3,600 Year 1 depreciation charge = £3,600 Year 2 – carrying value x depreciation percentage (£24,000 – £3,600) = £20,400 x 15% = £3,060 Year 2 depreciation charge = £3,060 Year 3 – carrying value x depreciation percentage (£20,400 – £3,060) = £17,340 x 15% = £2,601 Year 3 depreciation charge = £2,601 To summarise this: Year Depreciation charge Carrying value 1 £3,600 £20,400 2 £3,060 £17,340 3 £2,601 £14,739 And this would continue until the van is disposed of.

he accruals concept is a principle of accounting that requires the recording of expenses in the period in which they are incurred, and depreciation is an example of this. The value of a non-current asset reduces each year, mainly due to wear and tear, and this reduction is known as depreciation. We enter depreciation charges each year as a debit in the depreciation charges ledger account and as a credit in the accumulated depreciation ledger account. Let us look at the following depreciation methods: • Straight line • Diminishing (reducing) balance • Units of production An exam task may give the following variations: a) Depreciation is calculated on a yearly basis and charged in the year of acquisition but none in the year of disposal. This means that you enter a depreciation charge for the year in which it was purchased, regardless of when in the year the purchase took place, but no entry is made in the year the asset is disposed of. b) Depreciation is calculated on a yearly basis and charged on a monthly basis for the months

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the machine is owed. This means that if the machine was purchased, or disposed of, part way through a year, you need to calculate how many months the asset was owned for in that year. Then take the depreciation charge for the year, divide by the 12 months in the whole year and multiply by the number of months it was owned. Straight line depreciation For this method you need to know the cost of the asset, any residual value (the estimated selling price at the end of its life with the business) and the life of the asset. Example: A crisp making machine in a crisp factory. The business buys a new machine to make strawberry flavour crisps and expects to make these crisps for three years only, after which the machine will be sold for scrap. The cost of the new machine is £68,000. The useful life is three years. The scrap value of the machine at the end of the three years is £8,000. To calculate: Cost – residual value / years of useful life £68,000 – £8,000 / three years = £20,000 The depreciation charge for each of the three years will be £20,000.

Units of production depreciation For this method you will need to know the cost of the machine and how many units the machine can make before it no longer useful in the business. Example: The crisp factory buys another machine for £35,000 to make chocolate coated crisps. The machine can make 10,000 tonnes of crisps, after which it will be disposed of for £1,000. The business expects the following volume of crisps to be manufactured using this machine. Year 1 – 3,000 tonnes Year 2 – 5,000 tonnes Year 3 – 2,000 tonnes To calculate: (Cost – residual value) / total units to be produced x units produced each year Year 1 – (£35,000 - £1,000) / 10,000 tonnes x 3,000 tonnes = £10,200 Year 2 – (£35,000 - £1,000) / 10,000 tonnes x 5,000 tonnes = £17,000 Year 3 – (£35,000 - £1,000) / 10,000 tonnes x 2,000 tonnes = £6,800 • Teresa Clarke FMAAT If you would like to work on more depreciation tasks, you might like this workbook, which is one of my series of revision workbooks devised to support your studies. It’s called ‘Depreciation and Disposals Revision Workbook’, and is available on Amazon for £3.30 in paperback or £1.89 as an eBook. See https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B08X63FJH2 PQ Magazine July 2021


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Articles inside

Careers Life at Zzoomm with our PQ of the Year; Agony Aunt Karen Young has more career advice; and our book review

5min
page 39

Fun The lighter side of life; and more great PQ giveaways

5min
page 40

Future emploment What

3min
page 38

Target costing Philip Dunn

4min
pages 32-33

Test bank How much do you know about material control and reporting direct material cost?

3min
page 34

AAT exams Nick Craggs explains the difference between mark up and margin

4min
page 29

Keep it simple Neil Da Costa

4min
page 35

CIPFA spotlight Student

2min
page 30

AAT guru In the first in a regular series, Teresa Clarke looks at how depreciation works

4min
pages 36-37

Local government ARGA gets

3min
page 31

Xero offer Add to your CV with a Xero qualification – and you can do it through PQ for FREE!

5min
pages 26-28

A question for Tom Top tutor

2min
page 22

Have your say There’s was

4min
pages 14-15

ACCA spotlight Beware exam

3min
page 21

International standards We

3min
pages 18-19

CIMA spotlight Why question

8min
pages 24-25

Wellbeing Studying and sitting exams can really take it out of you, so make sure you take time out to look after yourself

4min
page 23

ICAEW spotlight Why data

2min
page 20

ACCA exam meltdown

2min
page 5
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