AccountingManagers 03
AccountingManagers 03
AccountingManagers 03
• Financial Accounting
• must be useful, understandable, accurate, and accessible, focuses on external users and investors, GAAP
provided set of standard rules for industry to follow
• Managerial Accounting
• includes other sources: marketing, volume, demographic and production data, time and cost budgets, &
cost/benefit analysis, focus on internal users such as production/sales managers, and employees
• Accountants turn data into information which is sorted, compiled and turned into useful
report
• Financing is future focused, data is available to inside users only
Financial Accounting Standards
• Ethics is the code that provides criteria for evaluating right and wrong
• Accounting’s ethical standards are articulated in published code of ethics which provide
guidance
• Different companies have different codes, but are generally similar
1. Recognize and consider all relevant facts and circumstances
2. Consider ethical issues involved
3. Consider established internal procedures
4. Formulate alternative courses of action
Users of Accounting
Users of Accounting Information
• Management discussion and analysis: provides overview of previous year’s operations and
how company performed financially
• Audited financial statements:
• balance sheet: assets are what company owns, equity and liabilities show who owns it
• income statement: increases and decreases in net assets
• statement of retained earnings: reconciles net income from year to balance sheet statement of equity
• statement of cash flows: shows transactions that affected cash in operations, investing, and financing
• Footnotes and disclosures, auditor’s reports
Accounting Principles
The Accounting Entity
• Basic underlying assumption of GAAP is that there are boundaries around business
organization that defines single economic reporting entity
• second is that entity observed is a going concern
• Going concern principle: presumes economic entity will remain in operation for foreseeable
future
Basic Accounting Principles
• Cost principle: reporting assets at historical cost serves combined principles of consistency,
objectivity, and conservatism
• Objectivity: financial statements of organization are based on solid evidence
• Monetary unit: you only record business transactions that can be expressed in terms of
currency
• Conservatism: if there is doubt between two options, accountant should choose one that
reports lesser assets
Accrual Basis Accounting
• Recognized revenue:
• Realized revenue: when there is every good reason to believe revenue will be received
• Matching concept: requires that revenues and related expenses are recognized together in
same period
• goal is to match expenses against the revenues
• requires that revenues and related expenses be recognized together in same period
• Accrual basis accounting requires matching expenses to revenues whenever possible
Quick Review
• Accountants take massive amounts of data and turn it into useful financial information
• Stakeholders want to make sure financial reports are accurate
• Accounting’s ethical standards are articulated in published code of ethics which provide
guidance
• Lenders require financial statements for any entity, and suppliers may also require them
• Basic Accounting Principles: Consistency, Full Disclosure, Materiality, Verifiability, Cost
Principle, Objectivity, Monetary Unit, Conservatism
• Accrual Basis Accounting