Financial Accounting for Contracts
A contract is a big job requiring considerable length of time to
complete and comprising activities to be done outside the factory
promises, viz. construction of a dam or school building, laying down
railway lines, etc. Since each contract involves considerable resources
both in terms of men and materials, it is necessary to devise an
appropriate accounting system to ascertain the cost and profit made on
each contract separately.
Profit on incomplete contracts: At the end of an accounting
period it may be found that certain contract have been completed while
others are still in process and will be completed in the coming years.
The total profits made on completed contract say be safely taken to the
credit of the profit and loss account. But the same cannot be done in
case of incomplete contracts. These contracts are still in process, and
there are possibilities of profits being turned into to losses on
account of heavy rise in prices of materials and labor and losses on
account of other unforeseen contingencies. At the same time it does not
also seem desire able to consider the profits only on completed
contracts and ignore completely incomplete ones because this may result
in heavy fluctuations in the figure of profit from year to year. A year
in which a large number of contracts have been completed will show an
abnormal high figure for profit while reserve may be the case in the
year in which a large number of contracts remain incomplete. Therefore,
profits on incomplete contracts should be considered, of course, after
providing adequate sums for meeting unknown contingencies.
There are no hard and fast rules for the calculation of the figures
for profit to be taken to the credit of profit and loss account.
However, the following rules may be followed:
(a) Profit should be considered in respect of work certified only, work uncertified should always be valued at cost.
(b) No profit should be taken into consideration if the
amount of work certified is less than 1/4 of the contract price because
in such cases it is not possible to foresee the future clearly.
(c) If the amount of work certified is 1/4 or more but less
than1/2 of the contract price, 1/3 of the profit disclosed, as reduced
but the percentage of cash received from the contractee, should be
taken to the profit and loss account. The balance should be allowed to
remain as a reserve.
(d) If the amount of work certified is very much near
completion, if possible the total cost of completing the contract
should be estimated The estimated total profit on the contract then can
be calculated by deducting the total estimated cost from the contract
price. The profit and loss should be credited with that proportion of
total estimated profit on cash basis, which the work certified bears to
the total contract price.
(f) The whole of loss, if any, should be transferred to the profit and loss account.
Cost Plus Contracts: In certain contracts the contractee
agrees to pay to the contractor the cost price (usually prime cost) of
the work done on the contract plus an agreed percentage thereof by way
of overhead expenses and profit. Such contracts are known as cost-plus
contracts. The system of cost plus contract costing is employed in
cases where it is very difficult for the contractor to quote the
contract price because there has been no precedent which he may take as
basis. It is also employed where the work to be done is not fixed at
the time of placing order for the contract. The method is generally
used where government happens to be the contractee. The method suffers
from the following disadvantages:
There is no incentive to the contractor to eliminate waste and
economies the cost of completing the contract. On the other hand, he is
tempted to increase the cost because greater the cost, the greater will
be his share of profit. In case of this system the amount of overheads
recovered and profit made depends upon the value of materials used,
which is subject to considerable price fluctuations. The agreed fixed
percentage may, therefore, prove to be either too excessive or too low
for covering overheads and profit.
Escalation Clause: Escalation clause is usually provided in
the contract as a safeguard against any likely changes in the prices of
utilization of material and labor. The clause provides that in case
prices of items of raw materials, labor, etc. specified in the
contract, change during the execution of the contract, beyond a
specified limit over the price prevailing at the time of signing the
agreement, the contract price will be suitably adjusted. The term of
the contract specify the procedure for calculating such adjustment in
order to avoid all future disputes. Thus, such a clause safeguards the
interests of both the contractor and contractee in case of fluctuations
in the price of materials and labor, etc.
Work in Progress: At the end of the accounting period a
contract may still be in progress. The term work in progress refers to
the work done so for in respect of the contract, which is still
incomplete. It consists of the following:
(1) Working Certified: It refers to the work approved by the
contractee. In case of contracts it is the useful practice for the
contractor to get the work approved from time to time from the
contractee. This is helpful to the contractor in two ways; first in
case the contractee finds the work not up to specifications, he may ask
the contractor to take corrective actions in time. Second, in contract
accounts it is useful practice to have a system of progress payments,
i.e., the contractee agrees to pay a certain percentage of the work
certified (say, 80 or 90 percent). This is advantageous to the
contractor since he gets immediate liquid funds.
(2) Work Uncertified: It refers to the work which has been done by the contractor but not so far approved by the contractee.
Work certified generally includes some profit element also while work uncertified is always valued at cost to the contractor.
Sub Contracts: The contractor may entrust some portion of the
work to be done under the contract to a sub-contractor. Usually work of
a specialized nature, i.e., steel work, special flooring, etc., is done
by sub-contractors, who are responsible to the main contractor. The
cost of such sub-contracts is a direct charge against the contract for
which the work has been done.
Special financial and management accounting is required to maintain the records of construction contracts.