Ledgers
Definition: A
ledger contains summarized financial information that is classified by
assignment to a specific account number using a Chart of Accounts.
1.
General Ledger
We can understand
General Ledger as a principal ledger (sometimes called Nominal Ledger) used
together with subsidiary ledgers that contains all of the balance sheet and
income statement accounts. So General Ledger is a list of accounts showing
changes in them during the accounting period and final balances in the accounts
at the end of that particular period.
It can contain large
number of different accounts. Each account has its purpose, name and number to
distinguish it from the other accounts.
Plant and machinery – cost (fixed asset) Plant and machinery – accumulated depreciation (reduction in fixed asset)
Vehicles – cost (fixed asset)
Inventories (current asset)
Accounts Receivable (current asset)
Cash (current asset)
2.
Subsidiary Ledger
This is a ledger
containing individual accounts with a common features and characteristics.
Examples can be Accounts Receivable ledger, Accounts Payable ledger and other.
Ledgers consists of 4 c’s
1. Chart of Account
Chart of accounts (COA) is a list of the accounts used by an
organization. The list can be numerical, alphabetic, or alpha-numeric. The
structure and headings of accounts should assist in consistent posting of
transactions.
Uses:
1. Accounting combinations
defined in Chart of Accounts is used to various transactions happening in the
organization.
2. Helps in
generating account balances.
3. Helps in
Reporting
4. Helps in
Analyzing financial information
What is Flexfield?
A flexfield is a field made up of
segments. A flex field is a flexible data field that your organization can
customize to your business needs without programming. Oracle Applications uses
two types of flexfields, key flexfields and descriptive flexfields.
key
flexfield is a field made up of segments, where each segment has both a
value and a meaning. You can think of a key flexfield as an “intelligent” field
that your business can use to store information represented as “codes.”
Types:
1) Category
KFF
Oracle Assets uses the category flexfield to
group your assets by financial information. You design your category flexfield
to record the information you want. Then you group your assets by category and
provide default information that is usually the same for assets in that
category.
2)
Catalog KFF
If you make entries for
your items in a standard industry catalog or want to group your
items according to
certain descriptive elements, you need to configure your Item
Catalog Group Flexfield.
3)
Stock location FF
If you keep track of specific locators, you need to configure
your Stock Locators Flexfield and implement locator control in your
organization.
4)
Account Alias FF
If you want to define
logical references to frequently used account number
combinations and use
them as transaction source types, you need to configure your
Account Aliases Flexfield and define account aliases.
5)
Sales order FF
6)
If you want to ship
items from inventory to meet customer demand as specified in a
7)
sales order, then you
must configure sales order FF
Descriptive
Flexfields (DFFs) enable to capture additional pieces of information from
transactions entered into Oracle Applications. Descriptive flexfields provide
customisable ”expansion space” on your forms.
What is
segment?
A segment is a single sub–field
within a flexfield. You define the appearance and meaning of individual
segments when customizing a flexfield. A segment is represented in your
database as a single table column.
2. Currency
currency refers to a generally
accepted medium of exchange.
Types:
Functional
currency:
The functional currency is the currency you use to record
transactions and maintain your accounting data within the Oracle E-Business
Suite. In the primary set of books, the functional currency is always the
primary functional currency
Reporting Currency:
This type is related to
Reporting of account. The currencies are automatically converted according to
country.
Eg USD -> INR.
Multi
currency conversion rate:
It is a new functionality
that is available in R12.
3. Calender
Fiscal
Calender refers to financial
calendar.
In a Fiscal Calendar, the first month of the year is usually not
January (which is the usual first month of a normal calendar). Companies decide
when they want to start a year. For e.g in India, most of the businesses start
their new year during Diwali. Lets say a company decides their first month of
their fiscal year is going to be Jun so the last month is May.
Accounting calender is used for recording the transactions for the financial year and it will share across the application.
Workday
calendar controls the scheduling of
work orders(WIP jobs)
4. Accounting method
The accounting method that a company decides to use to determine
the costs of inventory can directly impact the balance sheet, income statement and statement of cash flow. There are three
inventory-costing methods that are widely used by both public and private
companies:
- Average Cost
This method is quite straightforward. Standard cost Standard cost systems are usually Process cost systems in which accountants use set eg. Consumer goods - Standards Cost
Instead of attempting to compute an actual cost per unit
for each period. Eg. Manufacturing
company
- First-In, First-Out (FIFO)
This method assumes that the first unit making its way into inventory is the first sold. Eg Perishable goods like vegetables - Last-In, First-Out (LIFO)
This method assumes that the last unit making its way into inventory is sold first. Eg.old goods like wine, gold - PMAC(periodic moving average cost) Iterative Periodic Average Costing (IPAC) is an alternative approach to standard periodic average costing and differs in the method of valuating the inter-organization transfers across cost groups.eg OPM Companies
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