Accrued Liability

  

Companies buy things on credit all the time. Those expenses usually need to be paid in a relatively short period. They are short-term liabilities, which sit on the balance sheet until they are paid, at which point they transcend off the balance sheet and become a line item on the income statement.

Lawn Mowers That Sing, LLC pre-purchases noise-dampening materials for their Pink Lady model, which defaults to Celine Dion and Shania Twain music. The noise-dampening material is mostly sand, packed inside dense burlap, and they buy tons of it at a time, slowly paying off the liability owed to the Sand and Burlap Corporation of Chicago, Illinois over time. Those payments are a short-term liability that is current, and must be paid off on a net 90-day basis.

So that's one form of liability that singing lawn mowers accrue, and it maps to other more traditional forms of accrued liability, like salary and benefits owed, bonuses payable, and vacation days earned that are essentially a debt owed by the company to the employee each year, depending on whether their state is red or blue.

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Finance: What is Accrual Accounting?39 Views

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Finance a la shmoop... what is accrual accounting? well there are two

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religions in the way in which beans get counted the first is cash accounting [Cash accounting building]

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which just tracks cash in the door and cash out the door in any given period [Cash enters door and exits]

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the second is accrual accounting which tries to guess or impute the values

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coming in and going out in a given firm hoping to give a true picture of how

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well or poorly a company is performing financially and you might ask how cash

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and accrual accounting can be different like aren't beans just beans that you

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count well stay tuned here in accrual accounting you might have an obligation

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like an employee bonus which you think is highly likely to be paid at the end [Employee happy at getting a bonus]

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of the year almost treated like debt the employee makes 6 grand a month and is

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very likely due 10 grand in bonus money at the end of the year it's payable on

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December 31 that's when the cash would go out the door of the company but given [Cash exiting the door]

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that it's highly likely to be paid or earned by the employee so they'd have a

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legal claim on that 10 grand the company using accrual accounting would accrue

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the liability labeled something like bonuses or or is it bony well something

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like that bonus is payable.. and would accrue the

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value of 10 grand divided by 12 because that's the number of months in a year in

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California anyway or about 833 dollars a month throughout the year that's how you [Employee bonus divided by 12 months calculation]

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would accrue for that likely bonus now promising an employee a bonus and not

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giving it to them after they've earned it well that would be a cruel accounting [Person holds out cash to employee and takes it away]

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a totally different thing and much more mean-spirited

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