Chapter 1 Supa My Notes
Chapter 1 Supa My Notes
I. IMPORTANCE OF ACCOUNTING
Accounting is a system
thatIndentifiesRecordsCommunicates
relevant, reliable, and comparable information
about an organization’s business activities.
Financial accountants are concerned with the preparation of Financial Statements, which are
distributed to outside parties in an annual report.
Most common experience with accounting is through: credit approvals, checking accounts,
tax forms, and payroll.
Accounting—is the process of analyzing and drawing conclusions from this information.
Example: bookkeeper of a shoe store keeps the day-to-day records as to how many shoes are
sold and what bills need to be paid; accountant analyzes this data to evaluate the profitability
and health of the business.
a. Lenders (creditors)
b. Shareholders (investors)
Owners of a corporation.
c. Board of Directors
f. Regulators
h. Contributors
Use accounting information to evaluate the use and impact of their donations.
i. Suppliers
j. Customers
b. Purchasing Managers
d. Production Managers
e. Distribution Managers
Need reports for timely, accurate, and efficient delivery of products and services.
f. Marketing Managers
Use reports about sales and costs to target consumers, set prices, and monitor
consumer needs, tastes, and price concerns.
g. Service Managers
Require information on the costs and benefits of looking after products and
services.
B. Opportunities in Accounting
We are influenced by accounting when we earn money, pay taxes, invest savings, budget
earnings, and plan for the future.
Demand for accounting specialists is boosting salaries, and can vary because of location,
company size, professional designation, experience, etc.
Accountants can possibly have great benefit packages that can include: flexible work
schedules, telecommuting options, career path alternatives, casual work environments,
extended vacation time, and child and elder care.
Two types:
a. Accounting Principles
i. Cost Principle
Cash Example: cash is given for a service, its cost is measured as the amount of
cash paid.
Equal to Cash Example: if something besides cash is exchanged (i.e. truck), cost
is measured as the cash value of what is given up or received.
Objectivity—information is supported by
independent, unbiased evidence; it demands more
than a person’s opinion.
If revenue is recorded too late, a company would look less profitable than it is.
A company must record its expenses incurred to generate the revenue reported.
b. Accounting Assumptions
i. Going-Concern Assumption
v. Conservatism
C. Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX)
Congress passed this act to help curb financial abuses at companies that issue their
stock to the public.
It requires that the public companies apply other accounting oversight and stringent
internal controls.
Failure to comply can lead to financial penalties, stock market delisting, and criminal
prosecution of executives.