The document provides an introduction to accounting and financial information for businesses. It discusses the role of accounting, the accounting cycle including steps like journaling and ledger reporting, and key financial statements like the balance sheet, income statement, and statement of cash flows. It also differentiates financial accounting which reports externally from managerial accounting which provides internal information for decision making.
The document provides an introduction to accounting and financial information for businesses. It discusses the role of accounting, the accounting cycle including steps like journaling and ledger reporting, and key financial statements like the balance sheet, income statement, and statement of cash flows. It also differentiates financial accounting which reports externally from managerial accounting which provides internal information for decision making.
The document provides an introduction to accounting and financial information for businesses. It discusses the role of accounting, the accounting cycle including steps like journaling and ledger reporting, and key financial statements like the balance sheet, income statement, and statement of cash flows. It also differentiates financial accounting which reports externally from managerial accounting which provides internal information for decision making.
The document provides an introduction to accounting and financial information for businesses. It discusses the role of accounting, the accounting cycle including steps like journaling and ledger reporting, and key financial statements like the balance sheet, income statement, and statement of cash flows. It also differentiates financial accounting which reports externally from managerial accounting which provides internal information for decision making.
Financial Information Learning Objectives ✔ Demonstrate the role that accounting and financial information play for a business and its stakeholders. ✔ List the steps in the accounting cycle, distinguish between accounting and bookkeeping, and explain how computers are used in accounting. ✔ Explain how the major financial statements differ. ✔ Demonstrate the application of ratio analysis in reporting financial information. ✔ Identify the different disciplines within the accounting profession. The Role of Accounting Information 1. Small and large businesses often survive or fail according to how well they handle financial procedures. 2. Financial management is the heartbeat of competitive businesses, and accounting information helps keep the heartbeat stable. 3. Accounting, often called the language of business, allows us to report financial information about nonprofit organizations such as churches, schools, hospitals, fraternities, and government agencies. 4. It’s almost impossible to understand business operations without being able to read, understand, and analyze accounting reports and financial statements. What Is Accounting? • Accounting is the recording, classifying, summarizing, and interpreting of financial events and transactions in an organization to provide management and other interested parties the financial information they need to make good decisions about its operation. • The method we use to record and summarize accounting data into reports is an accounting system. • A major purpose of accounting is to help managers make well-informed decisions. The Accounting Cycle • The accounting cycle is a six-step procedure that results in the preparation and analysis of the major financial statements . • It relies on the work of both a bookkeeper and an accountant. • Bookkeeping, the recording of business transactions, is a basic part of financial reporting. • Accountants classify and summarize financial data provided by bookkeepers, and then interpret the data and report the information to management. The Accounting Cycle Journal: The record book or computer program where accounting data are first entered. Double-entry bookkeeping: The practice of writing every business transaction in two places. Ledger: A specialized accounting book or computer program in which information from accounting journals is accumulated into specific categories and posted so that managers can find all the information about one account in the same place. Trial balance: A summary of all the financial data in the account ledgers that ensures the figures are correct and balanced. Understanding Key Financial Statements Financial statement: A summary of all the transactions that have occurred over a particular period. The key financial statements of a business are: 1. The balance sheet, which reports the firm’s financial condition on a specific date. 2. The income statement, which summarizes revenues, cost of goods sold, and expenses (including taxes) for a specific period and highlights the total profit or loss the firm experienced during that period. 3. The statement of cash flows, which provides a summary of money coming into and going out of the firm. It tracks a company’s cash receipts and cash payments. The Fundamental Accounting Equation Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ equity For example, suppose you have $50,000 in cash and decide to use that money to open a small coffee shop. Your business has assets of $50,000 and no debts. The accounting equation would look like this: Assets = Liabilities + Owners’ equity $50,000 = $0 + $50,000 Now you have $30,000 of additional cash, but you also have a debt (liability) of $30,000. Then $80,000 = $30,000 + $50,000 How does financial accounting differ from managerial accounting? Managerial accounting provides information and analyses to managers within the firm to assist them in decision making. Financial accounting provides information and analyses to external users of data such as creditors and lenders