2. Learning Objectives
After studying this chapter, students should be
able to:
• Explain how accounting information assists in making
decisions.
• Describe the components of the balance sheet.
• Analyze business transactions and relate them to
changes in the balance sheet.
• Compare features of proprietorships, partnerships,
and corporations.
3. Accounting Concept
• The basic concepts of accounting as we
understand them today were first published in
Italy in 1494 by Luca Pacioli (1445 - 1517.) He
described them in a section of his book on
applied mathematics entitled Summa de
Arithmetica, geometria, proportioni et
Proportionalita. Pacioli was a Franciscan Monk
whose life and work was dedicated to the
glory of God.
4. Introduction
• Accounting - a process of identifying, recording,
summarizing, and reporting economic
information to decision makers in the form of
financial statements
• Financial accounting - focuses on the specific
needs of decision makers external to the
organization, such as stockholders, suppliers,
banks, and government agencies
5. The Nature of Accounting
• The accounting system is a series of steps
performed to analyze, record, quantify,
accumulate, summarize, classify, report, and
interpret economic events and their effects on
an organization and to prepare the financial
statements.
6. The Nature of Accounting
• Accounting systems are designed to meet the
needs of the decisions makers who use the
financial information.
• Every business has some sort of accounting
system.
– These accounting systems may be very complex or
very simple, but the real value of any accounting
system lies in the information that the system
provides.
7. Users of accounting information
• Accounting information is useful to anyone who
makes decisions that have economic results.
• Managers want to know if a new product will be profitable.
• Owners want to know which employees are productive.
• Investors want to know if a company is a good investment.
• Creditors want to know if they should extend credit, how
much to extend, and for how long.
• Government regulators want to know if financial statements
conform to requirements.
• Tax inspectors. They need it to be able to calculate the taxes
payable.
8. Users of accounting information (Cont)
• The bank. If the owner wants to borrow
money for use in the business, then the bank
will need such information.
9. Accounting as an Aid to
Decision Making
• Fundamental relationships in the decision-
making process:
Event
Accountant’s
analysis &
recording
Financial
Statements
Users
10. Financial and Management Accounting
• The major distinction between financial and
management accounting is the users of the
information.
– Financial accounting serves external users.
– Management accounting serves internal users,
such as top executives, management, and
administrators within organizations.
11. Financial and Management Accounting
The primary questions about an organization’s
success that decision makers want to know are:
What is the financial picture of the organization
on a given day?
How well did the organization do during a given
period?
12. Financial and Management Accounting
• Annual report - a document prepared by
management and distributed to current and
potential investors to inform them about the
company’s past performance and future
prospects.
– The annual report is one of the most common
sources of financial information used by investors
and managers.
13. Financial and Management Accounting
Accountants answer these primary questions
with three major financial statements.
• Balance Sheet - financial picture on a given day
• Income Statement - performance over a given
period
• Statement of Cash Flows - performance over a
given period
14. The reasons why businesses keep
accounts for these users can therefore
be summarized as:
• 1. To comply with legal and other
requirements e.g. Stock Exchange listing rules.
• 2. To provide information for stakeholders
about financial performance and viability.
• 3. To provide managers with information for
decision making.
• 4. To provide a structure to business activity
based on the careful processing of numerical
data.
15. Qualitative characteristics of Financial
Information
• Qualities of Useful Financial Information. The
four principal qualities of useful financial
information are understandability, relevance,
reliability and comparability
16. Understandability
• an essential quality of the information
provided in the financial statements is that it
is readily understandable by users. For these
reason users are assumed to have a
reasonable knowledge of business and
economic activities and accounting.
17. Relevance
• information has the quality of being relevant
when it influences the economic decisions of
users by helping them evaluate past, present
or future events or confirming or correcting
their past evaluations. The relevance of
information is affected by its nature and
materiality.
18. Reliability
• information is useful when it is free from material error and bias and can
be depended upon by users to represent faithfully that which it purports
to represent or could reasonably be expected to represent. To be reliable
then the information should:
• Be represented faithfully,
• Be accounted for and presented in accordance with their substance and
economic reality and not merely their legal form,
• Be neutral i.e. free from bias,
• Include some degree of caution especially where uncertainties surround
some events and transactions (prudence),
• Be complete i.e. must be within the bounds of materiality and cost. An
omission can cause information to be false.
19. Comparability
• users must be able to compare the financial
statements of an enterprise through time in
order to identify trends in its financial position
and performance. Users must also be able to
compare the financial statements of different
accounting policies, changes in the various
policies and the effect of these changes in the
accounts. Compliance with accounting
standards also helps achieve this comparability.
20. Types of Ownership
• Three basic forms of ownership:
–Sole proprietorships
–Partnerships
–Corporations
21. Types of Ownership
Sole Proprietorship
• A separate organization with a single owner
• Tend to be small retail establishments and
individual professional or service business - for
example, a single dentist, attorney, or public
accountant
• The sole proprietorship is an individual entity
that is separate and distinct from the owner.
22. Types of Ownership
Partnership
• An organization that joins two or more individuals
who act as co-owners
• Dentists, doctors, attorneys, and accountants
tend to conduct their activities as partnerships.
Some can be large international firms.
• The partnership is an individual entity that is
separate and distinct from each of the partners.
23. Types of Ownership
Corporation
• An “artificial entity” created under state laws
• Corporations have limited liability - corporate
creditors have claims against corporate assets
only.
– Individual investors are at risk only up to the amount
they have invested in the corporation. Creditors
cannot hold investors liable for the corporation’s
debts.
24. Types of Ownership
Corporation
• Owners are called shareholders or stockholders.
• Publicly owned vs. privately owned corporations
– Public - Shares in the ownership are sold to the public
on a stock exchange; the corporation can have many
thousands of shareholders.
– Private - Shares in the ownership are owned by
families, small groups of shareholders, and shares are
not sold to the public.
25. Types of Ownership
Management by the owners:
• Sole proprietorship - The owner is an active
manager in day-to-day operation of the business.
• Partnership - Partners are usually active managers
in day-to-day operations of the business.
• Corporation - Shareholders usually do not
participate in the day-to-day operations of the
business.
26. Advantages and Disadvantages of
Forms of Ownership
Corporations
• Advantages
– limited liability
– easy transfer of ownership - shares of stock can be
bought and sold easily (stock exchanges)
– ease of raising ownership capital - many potential
stockholders
– continuity of existence - life of the corporation
continues even if its ownership changes
27. Advantages and Disadvantages of
Forms of Ownership
Corporations
• Disadvantages
– possibility of double taxation - corporation pays
tax at the entity level and its owners pay taxes on
distributions of earnings to them
28. Advantages and Disadvantages of
Forms of Ownership
Proprietorships and Partnerships
• Advantages
– no taxation at the entity level - income of sole
proprietorship and partnership is attributed to the
owners as individual taxpayers
29. Advantages and Disadvantages of
Forms of Ownership
Proprietorships and Partnerships
• Disadvantages
– unlimited liability - creditors of the business can look to
the owners’ personal assets for repayment
– not easy to transfer ownership
– not easy to raise ownership capital - few, if any
individuals interested in a particular proprietorship or
partnership
– no continuity of existence - changes in ownership
terminate the proprietorship or partnership
30. CONVENTIONS REGARDING
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
• The conventions of financial accounting are
particularly significant to the development of
accounting theory in two ways:
• · They are themselves part of an empirical process
for developing rules of financial accounting. They
may be regarded as belonging to the body of
accounting theory.
• · They reflect the influence of institutional forces
which shape the philosophy of accounting in a
given economic and social environment.
31. Accounting concepts
• Textbooks refer variously to accounting
principles, accounting postulates, accounting
concepts, accounting imperatives and
accounting assumptions to describe those
basic points of agreement on which financial
accounting theory and practice are founded
32. 1. The historical cost concept
• The need for this has already been described.
It means that assets are normally shown at
cost price, and that this is the basis for
valuation of the asset.
33. 2. The money measurement
concept
• Accounting information has traditionally been
concerned only with those facts covered by
(a) and (b) which follow:
• (a) It can be measured in money, and
• (b) Most people will agree to the money value
of the transition.
34. 3. The business entity concept
• This concept implies that the affairs of a business are
to be treated as being quite separate from the non-
business activities of its owner (s). The items
recorded in the books of the business are therefore
restricted to the transactions of the business.
• No matter what activities the proprietor (s) gets up
to outside the business, they are completely
disregarded in the books kept by the business. The
only time that the personal resources of the
proprietor (s) affect the accounting records of a
business is when they introduce new capital into the
business, or take drawings out of it.
35. 4. The dual aspect concept
• This states that there are two aspects of
accounting, one represented by the assets of
the business and the other by the claims
against them. The concept states that these
two aspects are always equal to each other. In
other words:
• Assets = Capital + Liabilities
36. 5. The time interval concept
• One of the underlying principles of accounting
is that final accounts are prepared at regular
intervals of one year. For interval
management purposes they may be prepared
far more frequently, possibly on a monthly
basis or even more frequently.