FAR – Question about Accrued/Deferred Assets and Liabilities.

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  • #161577

    Hi guys!

    I am new to the forum and I am wondering if someone can help me with these concepts. I have having trouble understanding accrued/deferred concepts.

    Can someone please give me an example of each: accrued asset, accrued liability, deferred asset and deferred liability? Thanks in advance!

    I really wish FAR can be easier =(

    B - 07/11/2011, 90
    A - 08/24/2011, 90
    R - 11/26/2011
    F - 10/04/2011

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
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  • #294344
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    A deferral in nature is something that you either have paid or received cash for but will not recognize the benefit/obligation until the future (e.g. unearned revenue is cash you have received, but not yet earned; thus, a deferred liability on the balance sheet. Prepaid assets, like insurance, for example, are considered deferred assets; you pay during contract initiation but do not recognize the benefit incrementally until future periods). Likewise, an accrual is something where you recognize the benefit/cost immediately, but pay/receive cash in the future. The best example of these that I can think of are accounts receivable (accrued asset) and interest expense (accrued liability). I hope that helps.

    #294345

    Thanks! That helps a lot. But I am still a little confused on the wording. I was working on the Becker questions and one question was about “accrued real estate taxes.”

    When the real estate taxes are “accrued,” does it mean that it's a Taxes payable, i.e. accrued liability?

    B - 07/11/2011, 90
    A - 08/24/2011, 90
    R - 11/26/2011
    F - 10/04/2011

    #294346
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Correct…it means that you aren't going to pay your real estate taxes until some point in the future, however, you have incurred a portion of the expense. Let's say your annual real estate taxes are $1,200 due on Dec 31. Well, each month, even though you aren't actually PAYING the taxes, you are accruing for a portion of the expense ($100 [1,200/12mos]). So it becomes an accrued liability.

    #294347
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    One way to help understand this concept is to remember the order of the journal entry for cash. This is exactly what Baseball said, just presented in a different way…

    For Accruals, cash comes LAST:

    dr. Wages Expense

    cr. Accrued Wages Payable

    When wages are paid…

    dr. Cash

    cr. Accrued Wages Payable

    For Deferrals, cash comes FIRST:

    dr. Cash

    cr. Deferred Revenue

    As revenue is earned…

    dr. Deferred Revenue

    cr. Revenue

    #294348
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    WHOOOOAAAA – just realized I majorly screwed up the second journal entry under accruals although I'm sure you knew what I meant.

    dr. Accrued Wages Payable

    cr. Cash

    Hope I don't do something that stupid on exam day 😮

    #294349

    Thanks guys! This really cleared things up. I made the same mistake but I understand it the first and didn't even notice the mistake. Hehe. Thanks again!!

    B - 07/11/2011, 90
    A - 08/24/2011, 90
    R - 11/26/2011
    F - 10/04/2011

Viewing 6 replies - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)
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