Accounting One, Chapter 9
Declining-balance depreciation
When the asset is more efficient (generates more revenues) in early years but less so over time, also used for tax.
Units-of-production depreciation
When usage varies each period.
Ordinary repairs and maintenance:
Expenditures for the routine maintenance and upkeep of long-lived assets. Because these expenses are matched to revenues, ordinary repairs and maintenance are sometimes called revenue expenditures
Intangible assets
Long-lived assets that have special rights but no physical substance. Legal documents describe the rights.
Straight-line depreciation
When usage is the same each period.
Intangible assets
Trademarks, Copyrights, Patents, Technology, Licensing rights, Franchises, Goodwill.
Two types of maintenance:
1. Ordinary repairs and maintenance 2. Extraordinary repairs and maintenance.
Capitalized
Accountants say costs have been capitalized when they are recorded as assets (rather than as expenses).
General Rule for Tangible assets under the Cost Principle
All reasonable and necessary costs to acquire and prepare an asset for use should be recorded as a cost of the asset.
Useful Life
An estimate of the asset's useful economic life to the company (not its economic life to all potential users). may be expressed as years or units of capacity, such as the number of units it can produce or the number of miles it will travel. Land is the only tangible asset that's assumed to have an unlimited useful life. Land is not depreciated.
Land improvements
Include the sidewalks, pavement, landscaping, fencing, lighting, and sprinkler systems that are added to improve the usefulness of land.
Asset Cost
Includes all the asset's capitalized costs, including the purchase cost, sales tax, legal fees, and other costs needed to acquire and prepare the asset for use.
Depreciation
The allocation of the depreciable cost of long-lived tangible assets over their productive lives using a systematic and rational method.
Acquisition
The cost of intangible assets are recorded as assets only if they have been purchased.
Residual Value
(or salvage value) is an estimate of the amount the company will receive when it disposes of the asset.
Depreciable cost
Asset cost - residual value
Long-lived assets
Business assets acquired for use over one or more years.
Tangible Assets
Long-lived assets that have physical substance. AKA: Fixed assets because they are often fixed in place.
Extraordinary repairs and maintenance:
Occur infrequently, involve large expenditures, and increase an asset's usefulness through enhanced efficiency, capacity, or lifespan. AKA Capital Expenditures.
Impairment
Occurs when events or changed circumstances interfere with a company's ability to recover the value of the asset through future operations.
Construction in progress
includes the costs of constructing new buildings and equipment.