Depreciation is an accounting and finance term for the method of attributing the cost of an asset across the useful life of the asset. Depreciation is an example of applying the matching principle as per generally accepted accounting principles.
Depreciation is a reduction in the value of a currency in floating exchange rate.
Depreciation is often mistakenly seen as a basis for recognizing "wear and tear", obsolescence, or impairment on an asset, but these issues, where seen as significant enough to account for, are handled through an asset revaluation reserve.
The use of depreciation affects the financial statements and in some countries the taxes of companies and individuals.
In economics depreciation is the decrease in value of the capital stock, physical depreciation. If capital stock is at the beginning of a period, investment is and depreciation , the capital stock at the end of the period, , is .
=Accounting= A company needs to report depreciation accurately in its financial statements in order to achieve two main objectives. First, to match its expenses with the income generated by means of those expenses. Second, to ensure that the asset values in the balance sheet are not overstated. An asset acquired in Year 1 is unlikely to be worth the same amount in Year 5.
Depreciation is an average or expected view of the decline in value of an asset. For example, an entity may depreciate its equipment by 15% per year. This rate should be reasonable in aggregate (such as when a manufacturing company is looking at all of its machinery), but there is no expectation that each individual item declines in value by the same amount.
Accounting standards bodies have detailed rules on which methods of depreciation are acceptable, and auditors will express a view if they believe the assumptions underlying the estimates do not give a true and fair view.
Recording a depreciation expense will involve a credit to an accumulated depreciation account. The corresponding debit will involve either an expense account or an asset account which represents a future expense, such as work in process. Depreciation is recorded as an adjusting journal entry.
A write-down is a form of depreciation that involves a partial write off. Part of the value of the asset is removed from the balance sheet. The reason may be that the book value (accounted value) of the fixed asset has diverged from the market value.
If the vehicle were to be sold and the sales price exceeded the depreciated value (net book value) then the excess depreciation would be considered as income by the tax office (capital gains). If the sales price is less than the book value, the resulting capital loss is tax deductible.
If a company chooses to depreciate an asset at a different rate from that used by the tax office then this generates a timing difference in the income statement due to the difference (at a point in time) between the taxation department's and company's view of the profit.
In declining-balance depreciation, each period's depreciation is based on the previous year's net book value, the estimated useful life, and a factor. The factor is commonly two; this is known as double declining-balance. Each period we calculate depreciation:
For the double-declining balance method, using the vehicle example from above, we compute the depreciation after the first year:
We subtract $6800 from our previous year's net book value to obtain our new net book value: . For the second year, we use this new value to calculate depreciation. Notice that it is significantly lower than the first year:
This process continues until we reach the salvage value or the end of the asset's useful life. Since declining-balance depreciation doesn't always depreciate an asset fully by its end of life, some methods also compute a straight-line depreciation each year, and apply the greater of the two. This has the effect of converting from declining-balance depreciation to straight-line depreciation at a midpoint in the asset's life.
However, when a company buys some physical asset that will last longer than one year, like a computer, car, or building, the company cannot immediately deduct the cost and enjoy an immediate tax benefit. Instead, the company must depreciate the cost over the useful life of the asset, taking a tax deduction for a part of the cost each year. Eventually the company does get to deduct the full cost of the asset, but this happens over several years; the number of years depends on an estimate of how long it typically takes that type of asset to become effectively useless, and require a replacement. A computer may depreciate completely over five years; a factory building, over 30 years. The maximum allowable useful life estimate under U.S. income tax regulations is 40 years. Other countries have other systems, many of which remove the choice of depreciation rate and method from the company altogether. In these jurisdictions accounting depreciation and tax depreciation are almost always significantly different numbers, as in many instances a form of "accelerated depreciation" can be used for tax purposes to lower net income (or, in some instances, a fixed asset may be allowed to be expensed for tax purposes; Section 179 of the Internal Revenue Code allows for this treatment in some circumstances).
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Odpisy | Afskrivning | Abschreibung | Depreciación | Amortissement comptable | Depresiasi | Depreciatie | 減価償却 | Amortyzacja | Depreciação | 折舊
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Depreciation".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world