Editing Book Keeping Task/Consolidated currency exchange

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Then separately we represent the exchange rate. We transfer from the Canadian dollar credit card account to the US Dollar credit card account. At the specified exchange rate US$2.00 is paid off and CAD$2.25 is owing.
Then separately we represent the exchange rate. We transfer from the Canadian dollar credit card account to the US Dollar credit card account. At the specified exchange rate US$2.00 is paid off and CAD$2.25 is owing.
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== Fund accounting ==
 
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A similar principle applies to
 
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{{link|Members:Book Keeping Task/Fund Accounting}}.
 
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Say in July there's a single bill for US$2.00 which is charged and the exchange is again CAD$2.25.
 
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But say US$1.00 of the bill has been given the class "Casino General" and the other US$1.00 has the class "Casino Admin", representing two different funds.
 
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In that case, we'll want to have 2 separate payments, one for each class. But the exchange will either be CAD$1.12 or CAD$1.13 each, giving a rounding error.
 
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Ultimately we want to charge CAD$1.12 to one fund, and CAD$1.13 to the other. We choose which one it's going to be, and try to be consistent.
 
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(For example, we may reason that "Casino Admin" has more strict rules than "Casino General", so it will be the smaller amount.)
 
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We pay from the corresponding fund subaccount of the Canadian Mastecard.
 
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We may have to calculate the exchange rate to give us the precise US dollar amount.
 
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E.g. CAD$1.12/US$1.00 = 1.1200, vs. CAD$1.13/US$1.00 = 1.1300.
 
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If the payment instead was a consolidation of two or more months, then we would use subaccounts of "ATB Mastercard US$ Consolidation",
 
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one for each fund.
 
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== Shortcuts ==
 
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Sometimes we can get lucky and there's no rounding error when the consolidated exchange amount is split between each contributing amount.
 
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If you know that's the case, there's no need to use the foreign currency consolidation account; you can just pay the foreign bill directly from the Canadian dollar account.
 
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This of course applies when there is nothing to consolidate -- when there is only a single amount and a single bill being paid.
 

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