Statement of Affairs (Edexcel IGCSE Accounting)

Revision Note

Statement of Affairs

What is a statement of affairs?

  • A statement of affairs is similar to a statement of financial position

    • The difference is that the business has not used a full set of accounting records

    • Therefore the business cannot complete an income statement to find the profit or loss

  • It is prepared to find the missing equity figure at the start or the end of the financial year

  • It is prepared from the assets and liabilities of the business

  • The equity can be found using a rearrangement of the accounting equation

    • Equity = Assets - Liabilities

How do I prepare a statement of affairs?

  • STEP 1
    List all the assets and calculate the total assets

    • Non-current assets

    • Current assets

  • STEP 2
    Write down the value for the total equity and liabilities

    • It is the same as the total assets

    • Leave the equity value blank for now

  • STEP 3
    List all the liabilities

    • Non-current liabilities

    • Current liabilities

  • STEP 4
    Find the missing equity value

    • Subtract the total liabilities from the total assets

Layout of a statement of affairs
Layout of a statement of affairs

Worked Example

Murray operates a local retail store. Murray does not keep full accounting records. Murrary provided the following information about his assets and liabilities at 1 January 2023: 

 

$

Shop fittings (net book value)

9 000 

Inventory 

35 600 

Trade receivables 

19 200 

Bank 

6 000 

Trade payables 

20  800 

Expenses owing 

300 

Prepare a statement of affairs to calculate Murray's equity at 1 January 2023.

Answer

  • Expenses owing is a liability

  • Complete the assets section

    • The total below is $69 800

  • The total for the equity and liabilities section will be the same

  • Complete the liabilities section

    • Expenses owing is an accrued expense which is a liability

    • The total below is $21 100

  • Subtract the liabilities from the assets to find the missing equity value

    • $69 800 - $21 100 = $48 700

Murray

Statement of Affairs at 1 January 2023

$

$

Non-current assets

Shop fittings at book value

9 000

Current assets

Inventory

35 600

Trade receivables

19 200

Bank

6 000

60 800

Total assets

69 800

Equity and liabilities

Equity

48 700

Current liabilities

Trade payables

20  800 

300 

21 100

Total equity and liabilities

69 800

How can I use a statement of affairs to calculate the profit or loss for the year?

  • You can use a statement of affairs to calculate the opening or closing equity value

  • This can then be used to calculate the profit or loss for the year

  • Closing equity is calculated using:

    • Closing equity = Opening equity + Capital introduced - Drawings + Profit (or - Loss)

  • You can rearrange this to find the profit or loss:

    • Profit or loss = Closing equity - Opening equity + Drawings - Capital introduced

    • A positive value indicates a profit, a negative value indicates a loss

  • Alternatively, you can draw up the equity ledger account and find the value that balances the account

    • If the balancing value is on the debit side then it represents a loss

    • If the balancing value is on the credit side then it represents a profit

The layout of the equity account when finding the profit or loss
The layout of the equity account when finding the profit or loss

Worked Example

On 1 January 2023, Murray's equity balance was $48 700. During the year, Murray introduced $10 000 capital to the business and took out $5 000 drawings. The equity account had a balance of $80 500 at 31 December 2023.

Calculate the profit or loss for the year ended 31 December 2023.

Answer

Use the formula.

$

Closing equity

80 500

Less: Opening equity

(48 700)

Add: Drawings

5 000

Less: Capital introduced

(10 000)

Profit for the year

26 800

Alternatively, draw up the equity account. It can be a rough sketch.

Details

$

Details

$

Drawings

5 000

Balance b/d

48 700

Balance c/d

80 500

Capital introduced

10 000

         

Income statement (profit)

26 800

85 500

85 500

Balance b/d

80 500

The profit for the year was $26 800.

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Donna Simpson

Author: Donna Simpson

Expertise: Accounting Content Creator

Donna is a classroom practitioner with over 25 years experience in teaching accounting and business studies at GCSE A-Levels and undergraduate levels, both in the UK and abroad. She currently works for a Multi-Academy Trust (MAT) as a teacher, instructional coach and mentor to other teachers. Donna is also an AQA A Level Accounting examiner as well as the content creator of resources used by all accounting teachers across the Trust. She enjoys designing and creating resources that provides students with deeper understanding of the subject content. Donna has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration with major in Accounting and Finance (BSc Hons) and ACCA certified to Level 2.

Dan Finlay

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Dan graduated from the University of Oxford with a First class degree in mathematics. As well as teaching maths for over 8 years, Dan has marked a range of exams for Edexcel, tutored students and taught A Level Accounting. Dan has a keen interest in statistics and probability and their real-life applications.