Lawson Insight Technical Documentation

Generated by:
Documentation generated by Decision Analytics

ERDs Tables Conditions Elements Libraries APIs Forms

AM06


AM06.1 - Type


Use Type (AM06.1) to define an asset type. Use asset types to group
assets that have similar characteristics (for example, BUILDING or EQUIPEMENT)
and associate them with a property classification (personal, real estate,
land, stocks, and so on), and with asset posting accounts. You must define
at least one asset type for each company that processes assets. You can also
use AM06.1 to further define a type into subtypes.

You can define an asset type that allows depreciation expense to be
allocated to multiple accounting units. Choose the Star button next to the
Depreciation Expense fields to open Depreciation Allocation (AM06.6). Use
this form to define depreciation expense allocations.



**Process at a Glance


1. Define at least one depreciation book.
2. Define a depreciation calendar for the current year (AM01.1).

3. (This step) Define an asset type (AM06.1)
4. Define an account group (AM05.1)
5. Define an accounting unit group (AM09.1)


NOTE  You can also associate a user analysis value and an activity to
a type.



**Processing Effect

If you want to define a subtype for an asset type, you must first define
the type alone (without a subtype).


Updated Files

    ADDRDATA   -

    AMACCOUNT  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    AMAUGROUP  -

    AMCONTROL  -

    AMSEGBLOCK -


Referenced Files

    AMASSET    -

    GLADDRESS  -

    GLCHART    -

    GLSYSTEM   -

    INSTCTRYCD -


AM06.2 - Types


Use Types (AM06.2) to define multiple asset types. Use asset types to
group assets that have similar characteristics (for example, BUILDING or
EQUIPEMENT)
and associate them with a property classification (personal, real estate,
land, stocks, and so on), and with asset posting accounts. You must define
at least one asset type for each company that processes assets. You can also
use AM06.2 to further define a type into subtypes.


**Process at a Glance


1. Define at least one depreciation book.
2. (This step) Define a depreciation calendar for the current
year (AM01.1).
3. Define an asset type (AM06.1)

1. (Optional - this step) Define a subtype (AM06.2)

4. Define an account group (AM05.1)
5. Define an accounting unit group (AM09.1)


**Processing Effect

Before you can define a subtype for an asset type, you must define the
type alone (without a subtype).
Types are part of the Asset Management reporting structure. Take your
reporting needs into consideration when you define types.
If you use asset-class depreciation, proper implementation of types
is critical to avoid over-depreciation. There must be a strict one-on-one
correlation between a type and the set of General Ledger accounts used by
an asset class that you must track on its own. For instance, you should not
set up class-depreciated assets that use the same asset account (that is,
company, accounting unit, account) but have different accounts for
depreciation
expense and accumulated depreciation.
Choose the Product Category button to open Product Category (AM06.3).
Use this form to define global manufacturer and product data. This data is
used by Product Category Workbook (AM206) to create a listing of scannable
product category bar codes. You can scan this information when adding an asset
with the use of a handheld terminal.
Choose the Star button to open Depreciation Allocation (AM06.6). Use
this form to allocate depreciation expense associated with a type to multiple
accounting units. To use this feature, you must select Y (Yes) in the Allocate
field, and the Allocate Depreciation Expense flag must be set to Y (Yes) on
System Options (AM16.1).



Updated Files

    ADDRDATA   -

    AMACCOUNT  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    AMAUGROUP  -

    AMCONTROL  -

    AMSEGBLOCK -


Referenced Files

    AMASSET    -

    GLADDRESS  -

    GLCHART    -

    GLSYSTEM   -

    INSTCTRYCD -


AM06.3 - Product Category



Use Product Category (AM06.3) to define global manufacturer and product
data. This data is used by Product Category Workbook (AM206) to create a
listing
of scannable product category bar codes. You can scan this information when
adding an asset with the use of a handheld terminal.

Each manufacturer ID and manufacturer name combination must be unique
and is assigned a unique bar code that represents the whole line of data when
you run Product Category Workbook (AM206).





Updated Files

    ADDRDATA   -

    AMACCOUNT  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    AMAUGROUP  -

    AMCONTROL  -

    AMPRODCAT  -

    AMSEGBLOCK -


Referenced Files

    AMASSET    -

    GLADDRESS  -

    GLCHART    -

    GLSYSTEM   -

    INSTCTRYCD -


AM06.4 - Asset Class Depreciation Rates



Use Asset Class Depreciation Rates (AM06.4) to define the depreciation
rates associated with specific asset classes, as dictated by each local Public
Utility Commission (PUC).




**More Information

Each asset class, sub-class, or jurisdiction must map to a unique asset
account, to which a specific rate and depreciation calculation can be applied
and to unique depreciation expense and accumulated depreciation accounts where
the depreciation is stored. In addition, you may need to track each asset
class, sub-classification, or jurisdiction separately as well as in groupings.
Depending on your needs, you can define asset class depreciation rates as
follows:




- On this form, you can define rates at the type or type and
subtype level. With this method, you define an asset class as a type, and
any sub-classifications as a subtype. You can define a separate rate for each
sub-class or jurisdiction and each type and subtype combination must be
defined
with a unique asset, accumulated depreciation, and depreciation expense
account.
You can report on each type subtype separately, or group the report by type.
If you have many sub-classes and jurisdictions, this strategy can be quite
cumbersome to set up.


- Another strategy is to use a single asset type, and therefore
a single set of asset and depreciation accounts across a company (possibly,
across several companies), and define a unique depreciation rate for each
accounting unit. This strategy requires you to set up an accounting unit for
each jurisdiction or sub-class you want to track, but it is still less
cumbersome
to implement than the subtype method, and gives you more flexibility in terms
of reporting, since you can create accounting unit groups and accounting unit
lists to report on.


To define depreciation rates at the accounting unit level, choose the
Detail button to open Asset Class Depreciation Rate Detail (AM06.5).



NOTE  You can combine both strategies. You can, for example, group all
switch-type equipment under one asset type, using subtypes to differentiate
between the various classes of switches, and use accounting units to reflect
the rate variations depending on jurisdictions.






Updated Files

    AMBOOKTYPE -


Referenced Files

    AMASSET    -

    AMASTBOOK  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    AMBKTYPEX  -

    AMBOOK     -


AM06.5 - Asset Class Depreciation Rate Detail



Use Asset Class Depreciation Rate Detail (AM06.5) to define asset class
depreciation rates by accounting units. This form lets you use a single asset
type (an therefore a single set of asset and depreciation accounts) across
a company, and define a unique depreciation rate for each accounting unit.
You can use this form as an extension of or in place of the functionality
offered by Asset Class Depreciation Rates (AM06.4), which lets you define
a depreciation rate for a type and subtype.




**More Information

Each asset class, sub-class, or jurisdiction must map to a unique asset
account to which a specific rate and depreciation calculations can be applied
and to unique depreciation expense and accumulated depreciation accounts where
the depreciation is stored. In addition, you may need to track each asset
class, sub-classification, or jurisdiction separately as well as in groupings.
Depending on your needs, you can define asset class depreciation rates as
follows:




- You can use Asset Class Depreciation Rates (AM06.4) to define
rates at the type or type and subtype level. With this method, you define
an asset class as a type, and any sub-classifications as a subtype. You can
define a separate rate for each sub-classification and each type and subtype
combination must be defined with a unique asset, accumulated depreciation,
and depreciation expense account. You can report on each type subtype
separately,
or group the report by type. If you have many sub-classifications, this
strategy
can be quite cumbersome to set up.


- You can use this form, Asset Class Depreciation Rate Detail
(AM06.5), to apply a single asset type, and therefore a single set of asset
and depreciation accounts across a company (possibly, across several
companies),
and define a unique depreciation rate for each accounting unit. This strategy
requires you to set up an accounting unit for each jurisdiction or sub-class
you want to track, but it is still less cumbersome to implement than the
subtype
method, and gives you more flexibility in terms of reporting, since you can
create accounting unit groups and accounting unit lists to report on.





NOTE  You can combine both strategies. You can, for example, group all
switch-type equipment under one asset type, using subtypes to differentiate
between the various classes of switches, and use accounting units to reflect
the rate variations depending on jurisdictions.






Updated Files

    ADDRDATA   -

    AMACCOUNT  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    AMAUGROUP  -

    AMBKTYPEX  -

    AMBOOKTYPE -

    AMCONTROL  -

    AMSEGBLOCK -


Referenced Files

    AMASSET    -

    AMASTBOOK  -

    AMBOOK     -

    GLADDRESS  -

    GLCHART    -

    GLSYSTEM   -

    INSTCTRYCD -


AM06.6 - Depreciation Allocation



Use Depreciation Allocation (AM06.6) to allocate an asset type's depreciation
expense to multiple accounting units by percentage.



**Processing Effect


If you define an asset that uses a type that has allocations defined,
the depreciation expense is distributed among the various accounting units
on this form when you run Depreciation Calculation and Listing (AM180) and
Period Closing (AM190). Each accounting unit will be allocated the percentage
of depreciation you define on this form.




**More Information

Any asset that uses this depreciation allocation must be defined with
a depreciation expense accounting unit that is included in this depreciation
allocation. If the depreciation expense accounting unit is defined on the
accounting unit group used by the asset, the depreciation allocation must
include that accounting unit. If no depreciation expense accounting unit is
identified on the accounting unit group, or if the asset does not use an
accounting
unit group, the default accounting unit used for the asset must be included
in this depreciation allocation.

You can change the allocation. Allocation changes affect only transactions
created after the change.




Updated Files

    ADDRDATA   -

    AMTYPALLOC -

    AMTYPALLOX -


Referenced Files

    AMACCOUNT  -

    AMASTTYPE  -

    GLADDRESS  -

    GLCHART    -

    GLSYSTEM   -

    INSTCTRYCD -


INVOKED Programs

    ACAC
    ACTA
    API4
    IFAC
    IFCU
    IFOB
    IFSG
    SLSE
    SLSU
    IFLU
    IFUP
    IFAU