All right. So now let's consider the differences between an Accrual Basis of Accounting, which is what GAAP requires, and a Cash Basis of Accounting, which is generally just easier to use, but it doesn't follow GAAP. Okay? Let's check it out. So, the first thing, let's consider something. The only way for us to really know the worth of our company, for us to truly know the worth, we would have to liquidate the company, right? And liquidate, that means to sell all the assets, right? Any inventory we have, we just have to sell it off. Any machines we have for production, we sell them and just get all in cash, right? So, our only asset is cash, and then we pay off all our liabilities. Everybody that we owe money, the banks, our suppliers, and then whatever's left over, right? Whatever's left over is the company's worth, right? That's really the true way to know what the company is worth. But obviously, an ongoing company just can't liquidate, right? So what we do is we use these financial statements. They act as progress reports for the company. I'm going to use this thinner pen at, I think it reports. I think the thinner pen looks a little nicer. Okay. Progress reports. Right? So, the financial statements, they come out periodically, right? And that's what this time period concept has to do with. When we do accrual accounting, which is what GAAP requires. Well, in accrual accounting, we're going to report our accounting information at regular intervals, right? And these are going to be consistent. So generally, these are going to be yearly, right? Or monthly or quarterly, right? It's got to be some sort of consistent interval, and in this interval, we want to understand what happened during that interval, right? At the beginning, we'll have a balance sheet at the beginning of the interval that tells us the assets, liabilities, equity, right? That we have. And then the income statements telling us what happened throughout the interval, say throughout the year. And then at the end of the year, we'll have a new balance sheet showing the new position of the company, right? So that's the time period concept that we're dealing with in accrual accounting, right? But we're just breaking up the time into these years. But the time doesn't stop, right? It's just constantly going. So the reason we break it up is for the reporting process.
So, let's first think about accrual accounting. And remember, accrual accounting, this is GAAP. Okay? GAAP requires accrual accounting. So what does it mean? Well, accrual accounting records the impact of business transactions as they occur, okay? So there's going to be triggering events that make us make a journal entry or make some sort of record that this event occurred. Okay? So with accrual accounting, you're going to see that every time there's some sort of event, we're going to make a journal entry. And let's think about revenue as well. So when we make a cash sale in accrual accounting, Well, this was an event, right? We delivered our product, we did our job, we're going to make a journal entry, right? We're going to make a journal entry, I'm going to put JE for journal entry. And I'm also going to put revenue right here because we do earn revenue at this point. Same thing with a credit sale, right? Now this is what's going to be different from a cash basis. So notice here, in accrual accounting, when we make a credit sale, this means that we give the customer the product, but they didn't pay us yet, right? We let them pay us later on. We gave them say a month to pay. So when we make a journal entry and So we're going to make a journal entry and we're going to earn revenue in this case. Okay? Now how about when we receive the cash from that credit sale, right? We made this sale, let's say now a month ago, and now finally the customer is paying us. Well, now when the customer pays us, this isn't a revenue entry. We took the revenue for this when we gave the customer the product, right? Now it's just a cash collection. This has nothing to do with us earning the revenue, but we still make a journal entry. Okay? This journal entry, it's going to be about accounts receivable. Right? We have some account receivable, some money owed to us, and we're collecting that account receivable, right? So there's no revenue there, we're just collecting an account receivable.
How about when we pay our employees? When we make a payment to our employees, we're going to make a journal entry and generally this payment, well, it's going to get rid of the liability of the money we owe to the employees, right? There's money, the employees work for us and while they work for us, they're accumulating earnings, right? That we have to pay to them. So eventually, when we pay them, this is us finally paying them and getting rid of that liability that we have, right? We have this liability to pay these employees, so we're going to get rid of it, right? And this generally with employees expenses, we're going to get we're going to get to this a little more, and we'll deal with it in a little more detail. So you'll see more details about that later. But just the idea that when they work for us, we're going to get rid of this liability, right? Of us owing them money when we finally pay them. Okay? And the last but not least, this is another trick with accrual accounting. So think about when an employee works. Let's say they had a pay date on January 28th and they kept working the next 3 days of the month, January 29th, January 30, January 31. But we didn't pay them for those days yet, right? So we have to accrue an expense for those days when we're doing accrual accounting, right? Let's say we're going to report our income statement on January 31st. We last paid the employee on the 28th. Well, he did work for us those 3 days on the 29th, 30th, 31st, but we didn't account for it in this period, right? Because our last payment to them was the 28th, we made a journal entry on the 28th, but they kept working. So these 3 days, we actually have to make a journal entry here. And we're going to learn more about these journal entries to accrue this expense. Okay? For those 3 days. Even though we didn't pay any cash, right? They work for us those 3 days. The pay dates coming up someday in the future and we're going to have to pay them on that future date, right? But those 3 days that they work this month, we have to accrue that expense this month. Okay? So we go into a lot more details about all of that, throughout this unit, but I just want you to notice that we're all of these events are triggering for a journal entry. Right? We had to make cash basis. Cool? Alright. So let's pause and we'll continue the rest of the cash basis. Cool? Alright. So let's pause and we'll continue the rest of the sheet.