Financial Accounting
Introduction
The purpose of
accounting is to provide the information that is needed for sound economic
decision making. The main purpose of financial accounting is to prepare
financial reports that provide information about a firm's performance to
external parties such as investors, creditors, and tax authorities. Managerial
accounting contrasts with financial accounting in that managerial accounting is
for internal decision making and does not have to follow any rules issued by
standard-setting bodies. Financial accounting, on the other hand, is performed
according to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) guidelines.
CPA's
CPA's
The primary
accounting professional association in the U.S. is the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). The AICPA prepares the Uniform CPA
Examination, which must be completed in order to become a certified public
accountant. To be eligible to become a CPA, one needs an undergraduate degree
in any major with 150 credit hours of course work. Of these 150 credit hours, a
minimum of 36 credit hours must be in accounting. Only about 10% of those
taking the CPA exam pass it the first time.
Accounting Standards
Accounting Standards
In order that
financial statements report financial performance fairly and consistently, they
are prepared according to widely accepted accounting standards. These standards are
referred to as Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, or simply GAAP.
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles are those that have "substantial
authoritative support".
Accrual vs. Cash Method
Accrual vs. Cash Method
Many small
businesses utilize an accounting system that recognizes revenue and expenses on
a cash basis, meaning that neither revenue nor expenses are recognized until
the cash associated with them actually is received. Most larger businesses,
however, use the accrual method.
Under the accrual
method, revenues and expenses are recorded according to when they are earned
and incurred, not necessarily when the cash is received or paid. For example,
under the accrual method revenue is recognized when customers are invoiced,
regardless of when payment is received. Similarly, an expense is recognized
when the bill is received, not when payment is made.
Under accrual
accounting, even though employees may be paid in the next accounting period for
work performed near the end of the present accounting period, the expense still
is recorded in the current period since the current period is when the expense
was incurred.
Underlying Assumptions, Principles, and Conventions
Financial
accounting relies on the following underlying concepts:
- Assumptions: Separate entity assumption, going-concern assumption, stable monetary unit assumption, fixed time period assumption.
- Principles: Historical cost principle, matching principle, revenue recognition principle, full disclosure principle.
- Modifying conventions: Materiality, cost-benefit, conservatism convention, industry practices convention.
Financial Statements
Businesses have two
primary objectives:
- Earn a profit
- Remain solvent
Solvency represents
the ability of the business to pay its bills and service its debt.
The four financial statements are reports that allow
interested parties to evaluate the profitability and solvency of a business.
These reports include the following financial statements:
- Balance Sheet
- Income Statement
- Statement of Owner's Equity
- Statement of Cash Flows
These four financial
statements are the final product of the accountant's analysis of the
transactions of a business. A large amount of effort goes into the preparation
of the financial statements. The process begins with bookkeeping, which is just
one step in the accounting process. Bookkeeping is the actual recording of the
company's transactions, without any analysis of the information. Accountants
evaluate and analyze the information, making sense out of the numbers.
For the reports to
be useful, they must be:
- Understandable
- Timely
- Relevant
- Fair and Objective (free from bias)
Double Entry Accounting
Financial
accounting is based on double-entry bookkeeping procedures in which each
transaction is recorded in opposite columns of the accounts affected by the
exchange. Double entry accounting is a significant improvement over simple and
more error-prone single-entry bookkeeping systems.
Fundamental Accounting Model
The balance sheet
is based on the following fundamental accounting equation :
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
This model has been
used since the 18th century. It essentially states that a business owes all of
its assets to either creditors or owners, where the assets of a business are
its resources, and the creditors and owners are the sources of those resources.
Transactions
Transactions
To record
transactions, one must:
- Identify an event that affects the entity financially.
- Measure the event in monetary terms.
- Determine which accounts the transaction affects.
- Determine whether the transaction increases or decreases the balances in those accounts.
- Record the transaction in the ledgers.
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