Financial Accountin 1
Financial Accountin 1
Financial Accountin 1
PALACODE, DHARMAPURI, TN
B.COM
FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING - I
NAME:
Reg No:
Prepared By
Mr. R.SIVAKUMAR,
M.Com., M.Phil., MBA., D.T.Ed., B.Ed., D.Co-op.,
Assistant Professor,
PG Department of Commerce.
Accounting Principles
Accounting Concepts Accounting Conventions
a) Entity concept a) Disclosure
b) Dual aspect concept b Materiality
c) Going concern concept c) Consistency
d) Money measurement concept d) Conservatism
e) Cost concept
f) Cost attach concept
g) Accounting period concept
h) Accrual concept
i) Periodic matching of cost and Revenue concept
j) Realisation concept
k) Verifiable objective evidence concept
ACCOUNTING CONCEPTS
1. Business entity concept: A business and its owner should be treated separately as far as
their financial transactions are concerned.
2. Money measurement concept: Only business transactions that can be expressed in terms
of money are recorded in accounting, though records of other types of transactions may be
kept separately.
3. Dual aspect concept: For every credit, a corresponding debit is made. The recording of a
transaction is complete only with this dual aspect.
4. Going concern concept: In accounting, a business is expected to continue for a fairly long
time and carry out its commitments and obligations. This assumes that the business will
not be forced to stop functioning and liquidate its assets at “fire-sale” prices.
5. Cost concept: The fixed assets of a business are recorded on the basis of their original cost
in the first year of accounting. Subsequently, these assets are recorded minus depreciation.
No rise or fall in market price is taken into account. The concept applies only to fixed assets.
6. Accounting year concept: Each business chooses a specific time period to complete a cycle
of the accounting process—for example, monthly, quarterly, or annually—as per a fiscal or
a calendar year.
ACCOUNTING CONVENTIONS
There are four main conventions in practice in accounting: conservatism; consistency; full
disclosure; and materiality.
Conservatism is the convention by which, when two values of a transaction are available, the
lower-value transaction is recorded. By this convention, profit should never be overestimated, and
there should always be a provision for losses.
Consistency prescribes the use of the same accounting principles from one period of an
accounting cycle to the next, so that the same standards are applied to calculate profit and loss.
Materiality means that all material facts should be recorded in accounting. Accountants should
record important data and leave out insignificant information.
Full disclosure entails the revelation of all information, both favourable and detrimental to a
business enterprise, and which are of material value to creditors and debtors.
Branches of accounting
Accounting has five main branches
Accounting Branches
1.Financial Accounting
2.Cost Accounting
3.Management Accounting
4.Social Responsibility Accounting
5.Human Resource Accounting