Dictionary Definition
deteriorate
Verb
1 become worse or disintegrate; "His mind
deteriorated"
2 grow worse; "Her condition deteriorated";
"Conditions in the slums degenerated"; "The discussion devolved
into a shouting match" [syn: devolve, drop, degenerate] [ant: recuperate]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Verb
- To make worse; to make inferior in quality or value; to impair.
- To grow worse; to be impaired in quality; to degenerate.
Translations
make worse
- Dutch: verslechteren, slechter maken
- Finnish: heikentää
- German: verschlechtern
- Hebrew: לדרדר (ledarder)
grow worse
- Dutch: verslechteren
- Finnish: heiketä, huonontua, rapistua
- German: verschlechtern
- Hebrew: להידרדר (lehidarder)
Italian
Adjective
deteriorate- Feminine plural form of deteriorato
Verb
deteriorate- Form of Second-person plural imperative, deteriorare#Italian|deteriorare
Extensive Definition
Depreciation is a term used in accounting, economics and finance with reference to the
fact that assets with
finite lives lose value over time. In accounting, depreciation is a
term used to describe any method of attributing the historical or
purchase cost of an asset,
across its useful life, roughly corresponding to normal wear and
tear. It is of most use when dealing with assets of a short,
fixed service life, and which is an example of applying the
matching
principle as per
generally accepted accounting principles. Depreciation in
accounting is often mistakenly seen as a basis for recognizing
impairment of an asset, but unexpected changes in value, where seen
as significant enough to account for, are handled through
write-downs or similar techniques which adjust the book value
of the asset to reflect its current value. Therefore, it is
important to recognize that depreciation, when used as a technical
accounting term, is the allocation of the historical cost of an
asset across time periods when the asset is employed to generate
revenues. This process of cost allocation has little or no direct
relationship to the market value or current selling price of the
asset, it is simply the recognition that a portion of the asset's
cost--the portion that will never be recuperated through re-sale or
disposal of the asset--was "used up" in the generation of revenues
for that time period.
The use of depreciation affects the financial
statements and in some countries the taxes of companies and
individuals. The recording of depreciation will cause an expense to
be recognized, thereby lowering stated profits on the income
statement, while the net value of the asset (the portion of the
historical cost of the asset that remains to provide future value
to the company) will decline on the balance sheet. Depreciation
reported for accounting and tax purposes may differ
substantially.
Depreciation and its related concept, amortization
(generally, the depreciation of intangible assets), are non-cash
expenses. Neither depreciation nor amortization will directly
affect the cash flow of a
company, as both are accounting representations of expenses
attributable to a given period. In accounting statements,
depreciation may neither figure in the cash
flow statement, nor may be "added back" to net income
(along with other items) to derive the operating
cash flow. Depreciation recognized for tax purposes will,
however, affect the cash flow of the company, as tax depreciation
will reduce taxable
profits; there is generally no requirement that treatment of
depreciation for tax and accounting purposes be identical. Where
depreciation is shown on accounting statements, the figure usually
does not relate to depreciation for tax purposes.
In economics depreciation is the
decrease in the economic value of the
capital
stock of a firm, nation or other entity, either through
physical depreciation, obsolescence or changes in the demand for
the services of the capital in question. If capital stock is C_0 at
the beginning of a period, investment is I and depreciation D, the
capital stock at the end of the period, C_1, is C_0 + I - D.
Accounting
A company needs to report depreciation accurately in its financial statements in order to achieve two main objectives: 1) to match its expenses with the income generated by means of those expenses, and 2) to ensure that the asset values in the balance sheet are not overstated. An asset acquired in Year 1 is unlikely to be worth the same amount in Year 5.Depreciation is an estimated or expected view of
the decline in value of an asset. For example, an entity may
depreciate its equipment by 15% per year. This rate should be
reasonable in aggregate (such as when a manufacturing company is
looking at all of its machinery), and consistently employed.
However, there is no expectation that each individual item declines
in value by the same amount, primarily because the recognition of
depreciation is based upon the allocation of historical costs and
not current market prices.
Accounting standards bodies have detailed rules
on which methods of depreciation are acceptable, and auditors will
express a view if they believe the assumptions underlying the
estimates do not give a true and fair view.
Recording depreciation
For historical cost purposes, assets are recorded
on the balance sheet at their original cost; this is called the
historical cost. Historical cost minus all depreciation expenses
recognized on the asset since purchase is called the book
value. Depreciation is not taken out of these assets directly.
It is instead recorded in a contra asset account: an asset account
with a normal credit balance, typically called "accumulated
depreciation". Balancing an asset account with its corresponding
accumulated depreciation account will result in the net book value.
The net book value will never fall below the salvage
value, meaning that once an asset is fully depreciated, no
further expenses will be taken during its life. Salvage value is
the estimated value of the asset at the end of its useful life. In
this way, total depreciation for an asset will never exceed the
estimated total cash outlay (depreciable basis) for the asset. The
exception to this is in many price-regulated industries (public
utilities) where salvage is estimated net of the cost of
physically removing the asset from service. If the expected cost of
removal exceeds the expected raw (or gross) salvage, then the net
of the two (called Net Salvage) may be negative. In this case, the
depreciation recorded on the regulated books may exceed the
depreciable basis. Companies have no obligation to dispose of
depreciated assets, of course, and many fully depreciated assets
continue to generate income.
Recording a depreciation expense will involve a
credit to an accumulated depreciation account.So the corresponding
debit will involve either an expense account or an asset account
which represents a future expense, such as work in process.
Depreciation is recorded as an adjusting journal entry.
A write-down is a form of depreciation that
involves a partial write off. Part of the value of the asset is
removed from the balance sheet. The reason may be that the book
value (accounted value) of the fixed asset has diverged from the
market value and causes the company a loss. An example of this
would be a revaluation of goodwill
on an acquisition
that went bad.
Methods of depreciation
There are several methods for calculating depreciation, generally based on either the passage of time or the level of activity (or use) of the asset.Straight-line depreciation
Straight-line depreciation is the simplest and most often used technique, in which the company estimates the Salvage Value of the asset after the length of time over which it will be used to generate revenues (useful life), and will expense a portion of original cost in equal increments over that amount of time. The Salvage Value is an estimate of the value of the asset at the time it will be sold or disposed of; it may be zero. Salvage Value is Scrap Value, by another name. Straight-Line Method:- \mbox =
This table illustrates the straight-line method
of depreciation. Book Value at the beginning of the first year of
depreciation is the Original Cost of the asset. At any time Book
Value equals Original Cost minus Accumulated Depreciation. Book
Value = Original Cost - Accumulated Depreciation
Book Value at the end of year becomes Book Value
at the beginning of next year. The asset is depreciated until the
Book Value equals Scrap Value.
If the vehicle were to be sold and the sales
price exceeded the depreciated value (net book value) then the
excess would be considered a gain and subject to the depreciation
recapture rule. In addition, this gain above the depreciated value
would be recognized as ordinary income by the tax office. If the
sales price is ever less than the book value, the resulting capital
loss is tax deductible. If the sale price were ever more than the
original book value, then the gain above the original book value is
recognized as a capital gain.
If a company chooses to depreciate an asset at a
different rate from that used by the tax office then this generates
a timing difference in the income statement due to the difference
(at a point in time) between the taxation department's and
company's view of the profit.
Declining-Balance Method
Depreciation methods that provide for a higher depreciation charge in the first year of an asset's life and gradually decreasing charges in subsequent years are called accelerated depreciation methods. This may be a more realistic reflection of an asset's actual expected benefit from the use of the asset: many assets are most useful when they are new. One popular accelerated method is the declining-balance method. Under this method the Book Value is multiplied by a fixed rate.Annual Depreciation = Depreciation Rate * Book
Value at Beginning of Year
The most common rate used is double the
straight-line rate. For this reason, this technique is referred to
as the double-declining-balance method. To illustrate, suppose a
business has an asset with $1,000 Original Cost, $100 Salvage
Value, and 5 years useful life. First, calculate straight-line
depreciation rate. Since the asset has 5 years useful life, the
straight-line depreciation rate equals (100% / 5) 20% per year.
With double-declining-balance method, as the name suggests, double
that rate, or 40% depreciation rate is used.
The table below illustrates the
double-declining-balance method of depreciation. Book Value at the
beginning of the first year of depreciation is the Original Cost of
the asset. At any time Book Value equals Original Cost minus
Accumulated Depreciation.
Book Value = Original Cost - Accumulated
Depreciation
Book Value at the end of year becomes Book Value
at the beginning of next year. The asset is depreciated until the
Book Value equals Salvage Value, or Scrap Value.
The Salvage Value is not considered in
determining the annual depreciation, but the Book Value of the
asset being depreciated is never brought below its Salvage Value,
regardless of the method used. The process continues until the
Salvage Value, or the end of the asset's useful life, is reached.
In the last year of depreciation a subtraction might be needed in
order to prevent Book Value from falling below estimated Scrap
Value.
Since declining-balance depreciation doesn't
always depreciate an asset fully by its end of life, some methods
also compute a straight-line depreciation each year, and apply the
greater of the two. This has the effect of converting from
declining-balance depreciation to straight-line depreciation at a
midpoint in the asset's life.
Activity depreciation
Activity depreciation methods are not based on time, but on a level of activity. This could be miles driven for a vehicle, or a cycle count for a machine. When the asset is acquired, its life is estimated in terms of this level of activity. Assume the vehicle above is estimated to go 50,000 miles in its lifetime. The per-mile depreciation rate is calculated as: ($17,000 cost - $2,000 salvage) / 50,000 miles = $0.30 per mile. Each year, the depreciation expense is then calculated by multiplying the rate by the actual activity level.Sum-of-Years' Digits Method
Sum-of-Years' Digits is a depreciation method
that results in a more accelerated write-off than straight line,
but less than declining-balance method. Under this method annual
depreciation is determined by multiplying the Depreciable Cost by a
schedule of fractions.
Depreciable Cost = Original Cost - Salvage
Value
Book Value = Original Cost - Accumulated
Depreciation
Example: If an asset has Original Cost $1000, a
useful life of 5 years and a Salvage Value of $100, compute its
depreciation schedule.
First, determine Years' digits. Since the asset
has useful life of 5 years, the Years' digits are: 5, 4, 3, 2, and
1.
Next, calculate the sum of the digits.
5+4+3+2+1=15
Depreciation rates are as follows:
5/15 for the 1st year, 4/15 for the 2nd year,
3/15 for the 3rd year, 2/15 for the 4th year, and 1/15 for the 5th
year.
Units-of-Production Depreciation Method
Under the Units-of-Production method, useful life
of the asset is expressed in terms of the total number of units
expected to be produced. Annual depreciation is computed in three
steps.
First, a Depreciable Cost is computed.
Depreciable Cost = Original Cost - Salvage
Value.
Second, Depreciation per Unit is computed.
Depreciation charge per unit is computed by dividing Depreciable
Cost by Total Units, expected to be produced during the useful life
of the asset.
Depreciation per Unit = Depreciable Cost / Total
Units of production
Third, annual depreciation, or Depreciation
Expense, by another name, is computed. Depreciation Expense equals
Depreciation per Unit multiplied by the number of units produced
during the year. Depreciation Expense = Depreciation per Unit *
Units produced during the Year.
Book Value, as always, is calculated by
subtracting Accumulated Depreciation from the Original Cost.
Book Value = Original Cost - Accumulated
Depreciation
Suppose, an asset has Original Cost $70,000,
Salvage Value $10,000, and is expected to produce 6,000
units.
Depreciable Cost = ($70,000-$10,000)
$60,000
Depreciation per Unit = ($60,000 / 6,000) =
$10
The table below illustrates the
Units-of-Production depreciation schedule of the asset.
Depreciation stops when Book Value is equal to
the Scrap Value of the asset. In the end the sum of Accumulated
Depreciation and Scrap Value equals to the Original Cost.
Units of time depreciation
Units of Time Depreciation is similar to units of production, and is used for depreciation equipment used in mine or natural resource exploration, or cases where the amount the asset is used is not linear year to year.A simple example can be given for construction
co, where some equipments are used only for some specific usage.
Depending on the number of projects the equipment will be used and
depreciation charged accordingly.
Group Depreciation Method
Group Depreciation method is used for depreciating multiple-asset accounts using straight-line-depreciation method. Assets must be similar in nature and have approximately the same useful lives.Composite Depreciation Method
The composite method is applied to a collection of assets that are not similar, and have different service lives. For example, computers and printers are not similar, but both are part of the office equipment. Depreciation on all assets is determined by using the straight-line-depreciation method. Composite life equals the total Depreciable Cost divided by the total Depreciation Per Year. $5,900 / $1,300 = 4.5 years.Composite Depreciation Rate equals Depreciation
Per Year divided by total Historical Cost. $1,300 / $6,500 = 0.20 =
20%
Depreciation Expense equals the composite
Depreciation rate times the balance in the asset account. (0.20 *
$6,500) $1,300. Debit Depreciation Expense and credit Accumulated
Depreciation.
When an asset is sold, debit Cash for the amount
received and credit the asset account for its original cost. Debit
the difference between the two to Accumulated Depreciation. Under
the Composite method no gain or loss is recognized on the sale of
an asset.
To calculate Composite Depreciation Rate, divide
Depreciation Per Year by total Historical Cost. To calculate
Depreciation Expense, multiply the result by the same total
Historical Cost. The result, not surprisingly, will equal to the
total Depreciation Per Year again.
Common sense requires Depreciation Expense to be
equal to total Depreciation Per Year, without first dividing and
then multiplying total Depreciation Per Year by the same number.
Creators of accounting rules sometimes are very creative, as was
noted on the discussion forum of Accounting Coach at
http://www.accountingcoach.com/accounting/discussion/517/group-depreciation-and-composite-depreciation/#Item_0
Taxes
When a company spends money for a service or anything else that is short-lived, this expenditure is usually immediately tax deductible in some countries, and the company enjoys an immediate tax benefit.To be eligible for depreciation, an asset must
have two features: (1) it has a useful life beyond the taxable year
(essentially why it was capitalized in the first place), and (2) it
wears out, decays, declines in value due to natural causes, or is
subject to exhaustion or obsolescence.
Therefore, when a company buys an asset that will
last longer than one year, like a computer, car, or building, the
company cannot immediately deduct the cost and enjoy an immediate
tax benefit. Instead, the company must depreciate the cost over the
useful life of the asset, taking a tax deduction for a part of the
cost each year. Eventually the company does get to deduct the full
cost of the asset, but this happens over several years. In the US,
the IRS's
depreciation
schedule for any given class of asset is fixed, and is related
to typical durability. A computer may depreciate completely over
five years; a nonresidential building, usually 39 years. The
maximum allowable useful life under US income tax regulations is 40
years. Though the IRS does allow a small choice of permutations for
depreciation
life and acceleration, it does not allow a taxpayer to invent
any random asset life. Other countries have other systems, many
simply eliminate all choice altogether. In these jurisdictions
accounting depreciation and tax depreciation are almost always
significantly different numbers, as in many instances a form of
"accelerated depreciation" can be used for tax purposes to lower
(taxable) net income in a given period (or, in some instances, a
fixed asset may be allowed to be expensed for tax purposes;
Section
179 of the Internal Revenue Code allows for this treatment in
some circumstances). Technically, these are not considered "tax
reductions" but tax
deferrals: lowering taxable income now by increasing expenses
should increase future taxable income (and taxes) at a later
date.
Importantly, no depreciation deduction is allowed
for inventories or other property held for sale to customers in the
ordinary course of business (Treas. Reg. § 1.167(a)-2 and
Thor Power Tool Company v. Commissioner). Land is also not
depreciable (Treas. Reg. § 1.167(a)-2). However, improvements to
land are usually depreciable, including landscaping.
In the US, there are generally five variables
that a taxpayer must take into account when computing the correct
depreciation deduction. These variables include: (1) the
depreciation base (the asset’s cost basis), (2) the asset’s class
life (estimated life expectancy of the asset), (3) the applicable
recovery period (the number of years the taxpayer can claim
depreciation deductions), (4) the applicable depreciation method
(see double declining balance method or straight-line method), and
(5) the applicable convention (§ 168(d)(4) of the code—generally
the half-year convention).
Economics
In economics, the value of a capital asset is
equal to the present
value of the flow of services the asset will generate in
future, appropriately adjusted for uncertainty. Economic
depreciation over a given period is the reduction in the
remaining value of future services.
Under certain circumstances, such as an
unanticipated increase in the price of the services generated by an
asset, its value may increase rather than decline. Depreciation is
then negative.
National accounts
In national
accounts, depreciation represents the decline in the aggregate
capital
stock arising from the use of capital in production, also
referred to as
consumption of fixed capital. Hence, depreciation is equal to
the difference between aggregate (gross)
investment and
net
investment or between Gross
National Product and Net
National Product. Unlike depreciation in business accounting,
depreciation in national accounts is, in principle, not a method of
allocating the costs of past expenditures on fixed assets over
subsequent accounting periods. Rather, fixed assets at a given
moment in time are valued according to the remaining benefits
derived from their use.
Further reading
See also
- Amortization
- John I. Beggs (1847-1925) - The American businessman responsible for modern depreciation techniques
- Expense
- Consumption of fixed capital
- Tax depletion
- Cost segregation study
- Deferred tax
External links
- Depreciation Accelerated depreciation, book vs. tax depreciation, use of estimates, journal entries...
- Fixed Asset Info Automatic depreciation calculator, tax and other accounting links, depreciation classes, and more...
- depreciation schedule of computer equipment
deteriorate in Arabic: استهلاك الاصول
الثابتة
deteriorate in Bulgarian: Амортизация
deteriorate in Czech: Odpisy
deteriorate in Danish: Afskrivning
deteriorate in German: Abschreibung
deteriorate in Spanish: Depreciación
deteriorate in French: Amortissement
comptable
deteriorate in Indonesian: Depresiasi
deteriorate in Lithuanian: Nusidėvėjimas
deteriorate in Hungarian: Amortizáció
deteriorate in Dutch: Afschrijving
deteriorate in Japanese: 減価償却
deteriorate in Polish: Amortyzacja
deteriorate in Portuguese: Depreciação
deteriorate in Romanian: Depreciere
deteriorate in Swedish: Avskrivning
deteriorate in Ukrainian: Амортизація
deteriorate in Chinese: 折舊
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
agent provocateur, aggravate, alter, ameliorate, amplify, annoy, augment, be changed, be
converted into, be renewed, bottom out, break, build up, change, checker, chop, chop and change, come about,
come around, come down, come round, crumble, damage, debilitate, decay, decline, decompose, deepen, degenerate, degrade, depreciate, descend, deviate, dilapidate, disimprove, disintegrate, diverge, diversify, embitter, endamage, enhance, enlarge, erode, exacerbate, exasperate, fade, fall back, flag, flop, get worse, go downhill, go to
pot, grow worse, harm, haul
around, have a comedown, heat up, heighten, hit rock bottom, hot
up, hurt, impair, improve, increase, injure, intensify, irritate, jibe, languish, lessen, let down, magnify, make acute, make worse,
mar, meliorate, mitigate, modulate, mutate, provoke, put back, reach the
depths, regress,
relapse, retrograde, retrogress, revive, rot, sharpen, shift, sicken, sink, slacken, slide, slip, slip back, sour, spoil, swerve, tack, take a turn, touch bottom,
turn, turn aside, turn
into, turn the corner, undergo a change, undermine, vary, veer, warp, weaken, worsen