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Profit and loss accounts

IB Business Management β€’ Unit 3

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πŸ“„ What is a Profit and Loss Account?

Definition: A profit and loss account (also called an income statement) shows a business's revenue, costs and profit or loss over a specific period of time (usually one year).

It answers the most fundamental question: did the business make money or lose money?

  • Covers a specific time period (e.g. year ending 31 December 2025)
  • Shows how revenue is earned and where money is spent
  • Required by law for all limited companies
  • Used by managers, investors, banks and tax authorities
The IB syllabus uses both terms β€” 'profit and loss account' and 'income statement' mean the same thing! πŸ“

πŸ—οΈ Structure of the Income Statement

The income statement follows a standard layout from top to bottom:


  • Sales revenue β€” total income from selling goods/services
  • Minus Cost of goods sold (COGS) β€” direct costs of products sold
  • = Gross profit
  • Minus Expenses (overheads) β€” rent, wages, marketing, depreciation etc.
  • = Net profit (profit before interest and tax)
  • Minus interest and tax
  • = Profit for the year (net profit after tax)
Think of it as a funnel β€” you start with ALL the revenue at the top and subtract costs layer by layer until you reach the profit at the bottom πŸ”½

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πŸ”’ Constructing a Simple Income Statement

Example: Bella's Boutique β€” Year ending 31 Dec 2025

Sales revenue: $120,000 Cost of goods sold: $48,000 Gross profit: $72,000

Expenses: Rent: $12,000 Wages: $30,000 Marketing: $5,000 Utilities: $3,000 Depreciation: $2,000 Total expenses: $52,000

Net profit: $72,000 βˆ’ $52,000 = $20,000

  • Always start with sales revenue at the top
  • Subtract COGS to get gross profit
  • List all expenses and subtract the total from gross profit
  • The final figure is net profit (or net loss if negative)
In the exam, lay out your answer neatly with clear labels and show EVERY step of the calculation β€” presentation matters! ✨

πŸ“¦ Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)

Formula: COGS = Opening stock + Purchases βˆ’ Closing stock

COGS represents the direct cost of the products that were actually sold during the period β€” not everything that was bought.

Example: Opening stock: $10,000 Purchases during the year: $50,000 Closing stock: $8,000

COGS = $10,000 + $50,000 βˆ’ $8,000 = $52,000
Opening stock = what you started with. Add what you bought. Subtract what's left. What's gone = what you sold! πŸ“Š

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πŸ” Interpreting the Income Statement

Numbers alone are not enough β€” you need to understand what they mean for the business.


  • High gross profit but low net profit β†’ expenses are too high (poor cost control)
  • Low gross profit β†’ COGS is too high or selling prices are too low
  • Net loss β†’ total costs exceed revenue β€” the business is losing money
  • Compare with previous years β†’ is profitability improving or declining?
  • Compare with competitors β†’ is the business performing above or below the industry?
In the exam, don't just state the numbers β€” EXPLAIN what they mean and SUGGEST what the business should do about it! This gets you into the higher mark bands 🎯

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