Ccounting Principles,: Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel
Ccounting Principles,: Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel
Ccounting Principles,: Weygandt, Kieso, & Kimmel
PREVIEW OF CHAPTER 12
ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
Assumptions
Monetary Economic Time
Principles
Revenue
Objectives of reporting
unit entity
recognition
Matching Full Cost
Qualitative characteristics
Elements of financial statements
period
Going concern
disclosure
Operating guidelines
STUDY OBJECTIVE 1
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1 Explain the meaning of generally accepted accounting principles and identify the key items of the conceptual framework.
STUDY OBJECTIVE 2
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2 Describe the basic objectives of financial reporting.
STUDY OBJECTIVE 3
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3 Discuss the qualitative characteristics of accounting information and elements of financial statements
RELEVANCE
Accounting information has relevance if it makes a difference in a decision. Relevant information helps users forecast future events (predictive value), or it confirms or corrects prior expectations (feedback value). Information must be available to decision makers before it loses its capacity to influence their decisions (timeliness).
RELIABILITY
Reliability of information means that the information is free of error and bias. In short, it can be depended on. To be reliable, accounting information must be verifiable we must be able to prove that it is free of error and bias. The information must be a faithful representation of what it purports to be it must be factual.
Relevance
1 Predictive value 2 Feedback value 3 Timely
Reliability
1 Verifiable 2 Faithful representation 3 Neutral
Comparability
Consistency
ILLUSTRATION 12-2
Principals
Revenue recognition Matching Full disclosure Cost
Constraints
Materiality Conservatism
STUDY OBJECTIVE 4
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ASSUMPTIONS
1 The monetary unit assumption states that only transaction data that can be expressed in terms of money be included in the accounting records. Example: employee satisfaction and percent of international employees are not transactions that should be included in the financial records.
Salaries paid
ASSUMPTIONS
2 The economic entity assumption states that the activities of the entity be kept separate and distinct from the activities of the owner of all other economic entities. Example: BMW activities can be distinguished from those of other car manufacturers such as Mercedes.
ASSUMPTIONS
3 The time period assumption states that the economic life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods. Example: months, quarters, and years
2000
QTR 1 QTR 2 QTR 3 QTR 4 JAN APR JUL OCT
2001
FEB MAY AUG NOV MAR JUN SEPT DEC
2002
STUDY OBJECTIVE 5
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5 Identify the basic principles of accounting.
PRINCIPLES
REVENUE RECOGNITION
The revenue recognition principle dictates that revenue should be recognized in the accounting period in which it is earned. When a sale is involved, revenue is recognized at the point of sale.
Total Revenue
The costs incurred in the current period are then subtracted from the revenue recognized during the current period to arrive at the gross profit.
PRINCIPLES
MATCHING (EXPENSE RECOGNITION)
Expense recognition is traditionally tied to revenue recognition. This practice referred to as the matching principle dictates that expenses be matched with revenues in the period in which efforts are made to generate revenues. To understand the various approaches for matching expenses and revenues on the income statement, it is necessary to examine the nature of expenses. 1 Expired costs are costs that will generate revenues only in the current period and are therefore reported as operating expenses on the income statement. 2 Unexpired costs are costs that will generate revenues in future accounting periods and are recognized as assets.
PRINCIPLES
MATCHING (EXPENSE RECOGNITION)
Unexpired costs become expenses in 2 ways: 1) Cost of goods sold Costs carried as merchandise inventory become expensed when the inventory is sold. They are expensed as cost of goods sold in the period in which the sale occurs so there is a direct matching of expenses with revenues. 2) Operating expenses Other unexpired costs become operating expenses through use or consumption or through the passage of time.
ILLUSTRATION 12-10
Cost Incurred
Benefits Decrease
Asset
Expense
PRINCIPLES
FULL DISCLOSURE
The full disclosure principle requires that circumstances and events that make a difference to financial statement users be disclosed. Compliance with the full disclosure principle is accomplished through 1 the data in the financial statements and 2 the notes that accompany the statements. A summary of significant accounting policies is usually the first note to the financial statements.
PRINCIPLES
COST
The cost principle dictates that assets be recorded at their cost. Cost is used because it is both relevant and reliable. 1 Cost is relevant because it represents a) the price paid, b) the assets sacrificed, or c) the commitment made at the date of acquisition. 2 Cost is reliable because it is a) objectively measurable, b) factual, and c) verifiable.
ILLUSTRATION 12-11
Matching
Matching Sales Revenue
Materials
During production
Labor
Operating Expenses
Revenue should be recognized in the accounting period in which it is earned (generally at point of sale).
Delivery
Advertising
Utilities
Cost
Full Disclosure
* Financial Statements * Balance Sheet * Income Statement * Retained Earnings Statement * Cash Flow Statement
Circumstances and events that make a difference to financial statement users should be disclosed.
STUDY OBJECTIVE 6
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6 Identify the two constraints in accounting.
CONSTRAINTS IN ACCOUNTING
Constraints permit a company to modify generally accepted accounting principles without reducing the usefulness of the reported information. The constraints are materiality and conservatism. 1 Materiality relates to an items impact on a firms overall financial condition and operations. 2 The conservatism constraint dictates that when in doubt, choose the method that will be the least likely to overstate assets and income.
ILLUSTRATION 12-12
CONSTRAINTS IN ACCOUNTING
Materiality Conservatism
$
$
$
$ $
$
$
If dollar amounts of costs are small, When in doubt, choose the solution GAAP does not have to be followed. that will be least likely to overstate assets and income.
ILLUSTRATION 12-13
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
STUDY OBJECTIVE 7
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ILLUSTRATION 12-14
COPYRIGHT
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