Azarenko J.
PhD Zhukova O.S.
PhD Petrachkova O.L.
Donetsk State University of Management
Amortization
of the expenseses of the companies
In accounting, the process of allocating
in a systematic and rational manner (he cost of certain items of the assets (these
are mainly capital assets) over the period of its useful life is known as
depreciation. There are three main types of depreciation causing the decrease
in value of an asset:
1) physical depreciation,
2) moral depreciation,
3) deterioration.
In the process of production the capital
assets gradually wear out, thus after a definite period of time they have to be
replaced. This is known as their physical depreciation.
However, capital assets are also
subject to moral depreciation, that is after serving for some period of time,
they may become obsolete before they are physically worn out and have to be
replaced by more up-to-date means of production. Such obsolescence of the
assets is caused by technological changes and by the introduction of new and
better machinery and methods of production. Obsolescence can also be caused by
the commodity produced by the asset, for example, if it goes out of fashion. In
the latter case, the degree of obsolescence will depend on the specific nature
of the asset. Sometimes assets can be easily adapted to alternative uses while
others may have only one application.
Deterioration means a change in
value of an asset because of the effects of nature, for example, for machinery
this might be rust, for buildings it is connected with decadence, for farm
lands it is caused by erosion.
In accounting, it is important to
know depreciation of the capital assets as it increases the company's expenses,
so two main methods are used by accountants in calculating periodic depreciation.
The most widely used is the straight-line method , in which the rate of
depreciation is constant for the entire working life of the capital assets.
According to the second method known as accelerated depreciation method, the
depreciation rate in the first years of asset use is greater than in the later
years.
Literature
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2. Jan R. Williams.
Miller GAAP Guide. Harcourt Brace Professional Publishing, 1996. ISBN:
0-15-601913-2
3. R. Baker, V.
Lembke, T. King. Advanced Financial Accounting. McGraw-Hill, 1989. ISBN:
0-07-003366-8
4. Comparative
international accounting/ edited by Nobes C. and Parker R. Prentice Hall, 1995.
ISBN: 0-13-328733-5
5. Fox S., Rueschhoff
N.G. „Principles of international accounting“ Austin Press, 1986. ISBN:
0-914872-22-2