Accounting for management

Description
need for accounting, various accounting activities, various users of accounting information, usefulness of accounting, limitations of accounting, principles of accounting, basic accounting concepts, conventions used in accounting.

ACCOUNTING FOR MANAGEMENT

The Need for Accounting Managers, investors, and other internal groups want the answers to two important questions: How well did the organization perform?

Where does the organization stand?

The Need for Accounting
Accountants answer these questions with two major financial statements:

Income Statement Balance Sheet

Confused?

What is Accounting?

is a Accounting
system that Identifies

Records information Relevant Reliable Comparable to help users make better decisions. that is Communicates

Accounting Activities
? Identifying
Business Activities

? Recording
Business Activities

?Communicating
Business Activities

ACCOUNTING
Accounting is a process of Identifying, Measuring, Recording, Classifying, Summarizing, Analyzing, Interpreting and Communication the economic information of an organization to its users.
Accounting is also called the language of business

Activities Under Accounting Identifying Measuring Recording Classifying Summarizing

Transactions Events Analyzing Interpreting Communication User

User of Accounting Information

External Users

Internal Users

•Lenders •Shareholders •Governments

•Consumer Groups •External Auditors •Customers

•Managers •Officers

•Sales Staff •Budget Officers

•Internal Auditors •Controllers

User of Accounting Information
Internal Users

External Users

Financial accounting provides external users with financial statements.

Managerial accounting provides information needs for internal decision makers.

Usefulness of Accounting
? Facilitates to replace memory ? Facilitates to comply with legal requirement ? Facilitates to ascertain net result of operations ? Facilitates to ascertain financial position ? Facilitates the users to take decisions ? Facilitates a comparative study ? Assists the management ? Facilitates control over assets ? Facilitates the settlement of tax liability ? Facilitates the ascertainment of value of business ? Facilitates raising loans

Accounting Limitations
? Ignores the qualitative elements ? Not free from bias ? Estimated position and not real position ? In some cases ignores the price level changes ? Window Dressing

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

Financial accounting practice is governed by concepts and rules known as generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
Relevant Information Affects the decision of its users.

Reliable Information

Is trusted by users.
Is helpful in contrasting organizations.

Comparable Information

Accounting is based on a set of principles on which there is general agreement, not on rules that can be “proved.”

Accounting Principles

Accounting Concepts

Accounting Conventions

Concept includes those basic assumptions or Conditions upon which the science of Accounting is based

Conventions includes those customs or traditions Which guide the accountant while preparing Accounting statements

Basic Accounting Concepts
Business Entity Concept
Money Measurement Concept
Going concern Concept

Accounting Period Concept
Historical Cost Concept Matching Concept Revenue Recognition Concept Dual Aspect Concept

Separate Entity Concept
The activities of the entity are to be kept separate and distinct from the activities of the owner and all other economic entities.

MONEY MEASUREMENT ASSUMPTION

Only transaction data that can be expressed in terms of money be included in the accounting records.

Hiring an employee
Do not record

Paying an employee Record

GOING CONCERN ASSUMPTION
The enterprise will continue in operation long enough to carry out its existing objectives.

NOW

FUTURE

Accounting Period Assumption

The economic life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods
2008
QTR 1 QTR 2 QTR 3 QTR 4 JAN APR JUL OCT

2009
FEB MAY AUG NOV MAR JUN SEPT DEC

2010

COST ASSUMPTION

Requires assets to be recorded at cost.
COST
is relevant because it represents:

COST
is reliable because it is:

PRICE PAID or ASSETS SACRIFICED or COMMITMENT MADE

OBJECTIVELY MEASURABLE and FACTUAL and VERIFIABLE

MATCHING CONCEPT

Expenses are matched with revenues in the period in which efforts are made to generate revenues.

REVENUE RECOGNITION CONCEPT

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.

Dual Aspect Concept
This is one of the fundamental concept of Accounting. It may be stated as “for every Debit there is a credit”. Every business transaction has a dual effect and the entry Made for the transaction is recorded on the debit and as well as on the credit side It may be expressed in the form of equation

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

ACCOUNTING CONVENTIONS

CONSERVATISM CONSISTENCY
FULL DISCLOSURE MATERIALITY

CONSERVATISM
According to this convention, the Accountants should follow the Rule “Anticipate no profits but provide for all probable losses”. The convention requires That PROFIT should neither be overstated nor anticipated

• When in doubt, choose method least likely to overstate assets and income • Do not intentionally understate!

CONSISTENCY
CONSISTENT INFORMATION
• Companies should use the same accounting principles from year to year. • Changes in accounting principles must be justifiable.
2000 2001

2002

FULL DISCLOUSRE
It requires that the financial statements should reveal all the relevant and reliable Information fully & fairly. This convention become more relevant in the companies Form of organization where management & ownership are in separate hands
Section 211 of the companies Act 1956 requires that the Income statement & Balance Sheet of a company must give true & fair value of statement of affairs of the Company& also prescribe the forms in which these statements are to be prepared

Materiality
• Will it influence the decision? – MATERIAL • No impact on decision? – IMMATERIAL

© PhotoDisc/Getty Images

© PhotoDisc/Getty Images



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