Accounting and Bookkeeping.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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The proliferation of mandated notes that accompany financial statements is a particularly visible example.
Such notes disclose information that is not already included inthe body of the financial statement.
One of the very first notes identifies the accounting methods adopted when acceptable alternative methods also exist, or when theunique nature of the company's business justifies an otherwise unconventional approach.
The notes also disclose information about lease commitments, contingent liabilities, pension plans, stock options, and the effects of translating foreign currencyamounts, as well as details about long-term debt, such as interest rates and maturity dates.
A public company having a widely distributed ownership includes among itsnotes the income amounts that it earned in each three-month fiscal period known as a quarter.
It also includes quarterly stock market prices of its outstanding sharesof common stock and information about the relative sales and profit contributions of the different operating components that make up a diversified company.
IV ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
Accounting as it exists today may be viewed as a system of assumptions, doctrines, tenets, and conventions, all encompassed by the phrase “generally acceptedaccounting principles.” Many of these principles developed gradually, as did much of common law.
In recent decades, however, an authoritative body, such as theFinancial Accounting Standards Board, has determined standards or rules for accounting principles.
Following are several fundamental accounting concepts.
The entity concept states that the item or activity (entity) that is to receive an accounting must be clearly defined, and that the relationship assumed to exist between the entity and external parties must be clearly delineated.
The going-concern assumption states that it is expected that the entity will continue to operate indefinitely.
The historical-cost principle states that economic resources be recorded in terms of the amounts of money exchanged; when a transaction occurs, the exchange price is by its nature a measure of the value of the economic resources that are exchanged.
The realization concept states that accounting takes place only for those economic events to which the entity is a party.
This principle therefore rules out recognizing a gain based on the appreciated market value of a still-owned asset.
The matching principle states that income is calculated by matching a period's revenues, such as the amount of merchandise sold, with the expenses (monetary costs) incurred in order to bring about that revenue.
The accrual principle defines revenues and expenses as the inflow and outflow of all assets—as distinct from the flow only of the cash asset—in the course of operating the enterprise.
The consistency criterion states that the accounting procedures used at a given time should conform with the procedures previously used for that activity.
Such consistency allows data of different periods to be compared.
The disclosure principle requires that financial statements present the most useful amount of relevant information—namely, all information that is necessary in order not to be misleading.
The substance-over-form standard emphasizes the economic substance of an event even though its legal form may suggest a different result.
An example is the practice of consolidating the financial statements of one company with those of another in which it has more than a 50 percent ownership interest.
The doctrine of accounting conservatism applies to a situation in which a company appears to be headed for a financial loss.
The accountant confers with management to determine whether this loss is probable or only possible.
In cases where the loss is deemed probable, the accountant and management then seek to estimate thelikely amount of the loss.
If the loss can be estimated, then the negative effect of the loss will be reflected in the company’s financial statement even though the losshas not yet actually occurred.
A The Balance Sheet
Of the two traditional types of financial statements, the balance sheet relates to an entity's financial position at a point in time, and the income statement relates to itsactivity over an interval of time.
The balance sheet provides information about an organization's assets, liabilities, and owners' equity as of a particular date—namely,the last day of the accounting or fiscal period.
The format of the balance sheet reflects the basic accounting equation: Assets equal equities.
Assets are economic resources that are expected to provide future service to the organization.
Equities consist of the organization's liabilities , which are its obligations together with the equity interest of its owners.
For example, assume that a business owns a building worth $7 million and that the amount left to pay on the mortgage loan is $5 million.On the business’s balance sheet, the building would be considered an asset worth $7 million, the unpaid mortgage loan balance would be considered a liability of $5million, and the $2-million difference between the value of the building and the outstanding loan would be the business’s equity.
Assets are categorized as current or long-lived.
Current assets are usually those that management could reasonably be expected to convert into cash within one year;they include cash, receivables (money due from customers, clients, or borrowers), merchandise inventory, and short-term investments in stocks and bonds.
Long-lived assets include the land, buildings, machinery, motor vehicles, computers, furniture, and fixtures belonging to the company.
Long-lived assets also include real estatebeing held for speculation, patents, and trademarks.
Liabilities are obligations that the organization must remit to other parties, such as vendors, creditors, and employees.
Current liabilities generally are amounts that areexpected to be paid within one year, including salaries and wages, taxes, short-term loans, and money owed to suppliers of goods and services.
Noncurrent liabilitiesinclude debts that will come due beyond one year, such as bonds, mortgages, and other long-term loans.
Whereas liabilities are the claims of outside parties on theassets of the organization, the owners' equity is the investment interest of the owners in the organization's assets.
When an enterprise is operated as a soleproprietorship or as a partnership, the balance sheet may disclose the amount of each owner's equity.
When the organization is a corporation, the balance sheet showsthe equity of the owners (the stockholders) as consisting of two elements.
These two elements are the amount originally invested by the stockholders and thecorporation's cumulative reinvested income, or retained earnings—that is, income not distributed to stockholders as dividends.
B The Income Statement
The traditional activity-oriented financial statement issued by business enterprises is the income statement.
Prepared for a well-defined time interval, such as threemonths or one year, this statement summarizes the enterprise's revenues, expenses, gains, and losses.
Revenues are transactions that represent the inflow of assetsas a result of operations—that is, assets received from selling goods and rendering services.
Expenses are transactions involving the outflow of assets in order togenerate revenue, such as wages, rent, interest, and taxes.
A revenue transaction is recorded during the fiscal period in which it occurs.
An expense appears on the income statement of the period in which revenues presumablyresulted from the particular expense.
To illustrate, wages paid by a merchandising or service company are recognized as an immediate expense because they are.
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