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Question
Explain the limitations of a journal.
Explain
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Solution
Limitations of a journal are as follows:
- If all transactions are recorded in a single journal, it becomes too long and unwieldy.
- Cash transactions are usually recorded separately in a cash book, so they are not reflected in the journal proper.
- Recording all transactions in one journal can make accounting work cumbersome; hence, separate journals (sub-journals) are maintained for different types of transactions, limiting the scope of the journal proper.
- Large firms divide the journal into various sub-journals like purchase journal, sales journal, returns journal, etc., so the use of the single journal is restricted.
- Using only one journal increases the risk of errors and frauds and makes them harder to detect.
- Recording all transactions in one journal does not provide classified or summarised information (e.g., monthly credit sales).
- It is time-consuming to record transactions in one journal and then separately post each to the ledger.
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Chapter 12: Accounting Records - EXERCISES [Page 150]
