Ch. 8 Current Liabilities Flashcards
Liability
A PRESENT responsibility to sacrifice assets in the FUTURE due to a transaction or other event that happened in the PAST.
Current Liabilities
Debts that, in most cases, are due within one year. However, when a company has an operating cycle of longer than a year, its current liabilities are defined by the operating cycle rather than by the length of a year.
- can also be called short-term liabilities
- Given a choice, most companies would prefer to report a liability as long-term rather than current, because doing so may cause the firm to appear less risky.
Notes payable
Written promises to repay amounts borrowed plus interest.
-About 2/3 of bank loans are short-term. Short-term funds usually offer lower interest rates than long-term debt.
Line of credit
An informal agreement that permits a company to borrow up to a prearranged limit without having to follow formal loan procedures and prepare paperwork.
- Rather than wait until borrowing becomes necessary, many companies prearrange the terms of a note payable by establishing a line of credit with a bank.
- The recording for a line of credit is exactly the same as the recording for notes payable.
Commercial paper
Borrowing from another company rather than from a bank.
- commercial paper is sold with maturities ranging from 30 to 270 days. Beyond 270 days, the issuing firm is required to file a registration statement with the SEC.
- The interest rate on commercial paper is usually lower than on a bank loan.
FICA taxes
Based on the Federal Insurance Contribution Act; tax withheld from employees’ paychecks.
- Social security and medicare taxes.
- This act requires employers to withhold a 6.2% social security tax up to a maximum base amount plus a 1.45% Medicare tax with no maximum.
- Therefore, the total FICA tax is 7.65% (6.2% + 1.45%) on income up to a base amount ($106,800 in 2010) and 1.45% on all income above the base amount.
Unemployment taxes
A tax to cover federal and state unemployment costs paid by the employer on behalf of its employees.
- Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) requires a tax of 6.2% on the first $7,000 made by each employee. This amount is reduced by a 5.4% (max) credit for contributions to state unemployment programs, so the net federal rate often is 0.8%.
- under the State Unemployment Tax Act (SUTA), in many states the maximum state unemployment tax rate is 5.4%, but many companies pay a lower rate based on past employment history.
Fringe benefits
Additional employee benefits paid for by the employer.
-ie: in the airline industry, the ability for the employee and family to fly free.
Unearned revenue
A liability account used to record cash received in advance of the sale or service.
Sales tax payable
Sales tax collected from customers by the seller, representing current liabilities payable to the government.
-The selling company records sales revenue in one account and sales tax payable in another
Current portion of long-term debt
Debt that will be paid within the next year.
- Long-term obligations (notes, mortgages, bonds) usually are reclassified and reported as current liabilities when they become payable within the upcoming year (or operating cycle, if longer than a year)
- ie: a firm reports a 10-year note payable as a long-term liability for 9 years but as a current liability on the balance sheet prepared during the 10th year of its term to maturity.
Contingencies
Uncertain situations that can result in a gain or a loss for a company.
Contingent liability
An existing uncertain situation that might result in a loss.
-Includes: lawsuits, product warranties, environmental problems, and premium offers.
Contingent gain
An existing uncertain situation that might result in a gain.
-We do not record contingent gains until the gain is certain and no longer a contingency.
Liquidity
Having sufficient cash (or other assets convertible to cash in a relatively short time) to pay currently maturing debts.
-3 liquidity measures: working capital, the current ratio, and the acid-test ratio