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ASSESS
DEPRECIATION ACCOUNTING PRACTICES AND PROFITABILITY OF SELECTED SMES
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Depreciation
is one of the most controversial and troublesome areas in accounting.
Depreciation
was actually a cost of doing business. Business executive tended to view
depreciation as a matter of setting aside something during prosperous periods
for the replacement of depreciable assets. When earnings are high, large
amounts of depreciation might be recorded and when earnings were low or less
provision for depreciation was recorded. Today, it is universally agreed that
depreciation is an expenses that must be recorded whether or not revenue is
sufficient to absorb it.
Depreciation
has been given different interpretations and meanings by various authors and
experts in the accounting field as a result many definitions of depreciation
exist as many as the authors and experts themselves.
Some of the
numerous definitions of the term depreciation as defined by many authors will
be examined.
The institute of chartered accountant
of Canada defined depreciation as a proportionate charge of an expanse to an
accounting period based the cost as other recorded value of fixed assets.
Himmed Clan (third international congress on accounting defined depreciation as
the price spreading the value of a fixed asset.
Montgomery
(auditing theory and practice) defined depreciation as an allocation of the
entire cost of depreciable assets to the operating express of a series of
fiscal period.
The American
Institute of Certified public Accountants defined depreciation accounting as a
system of accounting which aims to distribute the cost or other basic value (if
any) over the estimated useful life of the unit which may be a group of assets
in a systematic and rational manner.
Depreciation
is a part of the cost of a fixed asset is not recoverable on disposal and is
this part of the cost of fixed assets consumed during its period of use by the
firm. It is an expense, which is charged to the profit and loss account of a
period before ascertaining the real net profit or loss of an enterprise.
Depreciation
is sometimes divided into two classes:
INTERNAL
DEPRECIATION:
Internal
depreciation which arises from the operation of any cause natural to or
inherent in the asset itself for instance, wear and tear of plant and
machinery.
EXTERNAL
DEPRECIATION:
External
depreciation which arises from the operation of forces apart from the assets
itself for instance obsolescence, inadequacy and decay.
Depreciation
according Walter Mergs is that portion of the cost of fixed assets that is
deductible from revenue for the asset services used in the operations of the
business. In practice, the term depreciation is used to describe the cost of
the expired services of tangible fixed assets.
STATEMENT OF
THE PROBLEM.
Most people
are not aware of the resultant effect of adopting one depreciation method or
another on the reported profits and in the net book value of assets stated in
the financial statement of a business concern and so they tend to pass
erroneous judgment on the profitability or performance comparison between
companies by mere looking at either reported profit in the financial statement.
It is therefore imperative that research be conducted to find the following
problems:
How to
determine the probable use life of an asset.
How to
estimate the depreciation amount to be charged over its useful life.
What is
appropriate depreciation method to be used?
Whether the
use of varied depreciation methods by concerns of assets stated in the balance
sheet at the year-end.
Whether the
amount carried in the account of property plant and equipment and hence the
depreciation charges should be reviewed periodically in the line with
inflation. These are burning problems, which the researcher would find arises
to.
OBJECTIVES
OF THE STUDY.
The general
objectives of the work are to assess depreciation accounting practices and
profitability of selected SMEs in Port harcout
To find out
what influences company’s chance of depreciation methods.
To find out
what impact depreciation has on the company’s profitability and tax.
To find out
other significance depreciation has on the company’s financial statement.
To ascertain
whether proper treatment is given to depreciation accounting by the companies
studied.
To look into
the records kept in respect of plant machinery and equipment in order to secure
effective control over them through proper accounting.
Make
recommendations based on finding thereof.
1.4 HYPOTHESIS FORMULATION
For the
purpose of the following hypothesis will test on generalization of the impact
of different methods of depreciation on the profitability of a company.
H0 The different methods of depreciation do
not have an impact on the profitability of a company.
H1 The different methods of depreciation have
an impact on the profitability of a company.
H0 Depreciation does not have any impact on
management decisions.
H1 Depreciation has an impact on management
decisions.
1.5 THE SIGNIFICATION OF STUDY.
This project
will be useful to many companies in Nigeria in that it many companies in
Nigeria in that it will provide an in sign into the effect of depreciation in
income statement.
it enables
the determine the extent to which depreciation could help to
Build funds
for the replacement of their asset at the end of the existing asset useful
life.
B Reduce tax payable to the government by
reducing the company’s profit.
The study
will also prove useful to the shareholder in that depreciation reduces the declared
profit a nd the amount payable as dividend to shareholders. It has the
advantage of not affecting the company’s working capital as other expense do.
Both the
federal and state government will benefit from this study since depreciation
determines the volume of the company’s profit and the amount of tax payable to
the government.
The study
will also portray the reason. Why our also tax law disallow depreciation, but
instead provide capital allowance for the purpose of computing income tax.
The study will hopefully be useful to other
researchers, in that it will add to the existing literature in the subject.
Finally the
project will be useful to the researcher, in that it is presented in partial
fulfillment for the award of diploma in accountancy.
1.6 THE
SCOPE OF THE STUDY
The project
covers the depreciation accounting practices and profitability of selected SMEs
in portharcourt. It includes the impact of depreciation accounting on income
statement reporting in perspective.
1.7 LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
In a study
of this nature, a lot of limitation is bound to occur. It will be left to the
researcher to strive to achieve the list he could inspite of this limitation:
They are as
follows:
a. In adequate information was a limiting
factor on the extent to which the researcher could go on this study.
b.
Residual Value:
This could
be called savage value or scrap valued by some authors and experts it is the
estimated future disposal value of an asset I disposal may occur before the
asset is physically worn out and such asset will therefore still have some value before that which the accountant
should try to estimate. It is the value
an article or asset posses for use other than to which it has already been
devoted and not for resale this value can be also be amount which can
reasonably be expected to be realized
upon the retirement of a fixed asset.
c. Estimated Use Life:
This is the
period of time the fixed asset is expected to be effectively used in the
operation or activities of an enterprise this is the period beyond which it
does not pay to either keep the asset in use either by repair or any other
means it is the total number of services unit which may be measured in terms of
years the asset is expected to be used or unit expected to be produced etc.
form an assets.
The
following relevant information should be considered when computing the
estimated useful life of an asset.
Past
experience with similar assets
The assets
present condition
The
enterprises repair and maintenance policy
Current
technology and industrial trends
Local
technology and industrial trends.
d.
Depreciable Cost:
This is the
cost of an asset less its residual value. The cost of an asset means the
purchased prices incurred in acquiring an asset that is original cost when the
estimated residual value of an asset is dedicated from this cost that result
will be depreciable cost of that asset i.e. the cost on which depreciation base
since it is the cost of the asset service that would be used by a given
enterprise in computing depreciation charge it is usually less than the original investment in the
asset.
e.
Repair: According to bulletin “F” of
the U.S bureau of internal revenue repairs is defined as disbursement which
neither materially adopt up to the property nor appreciably prolong its life
but merely keep it in an ordinarily efficient operating condition.
f. Accumulated Depreciation: This is
a compilation at any point in time of the original cost already written
off as expense. In effect it show by how much the asset has fallen in value the
net book value is the original cost less accumulated depreciation and this is
the value recorded at the end of the
accounting period in the balance sheet.
g.
Profitability: In the purpose of this
project profitability will be taken to be concerned with the profit and loss
account which shows the earnings of a company form its activities during the
year and the balance sheet which shows that financial position of the company
as at the end of the accounting or financial year.
REFERENCE
Kermit D
Larson 1992 P 446 Financial Accounting Richard Iwrin Inc
Theodore
Long Cost Accountants Handbook New York the Ronald Press
Company
(1956)P 1195
Afolabi
Soyode P 260 Financial Accounting Principles and Practice F & A
Publishes Us
Walter B
Mergs (MC Gran Hill Inc 1978) P520 Intermediate Accountancy.
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